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All Forum Posts by: Jeremy Sicarro

Jeremy Sicarro has started 2 posts and replied 5 times.

Thank you both for your responses, they're tremendously helpful. In response to a couple of @Leon D.'s questions:

1. Yes, by "we" I meant both parties--us and my sister-in-law (and her husband). Sorry, I should've been a little clearer on that.

2. In an ideal world this would be the easiest thing to do, but the 64 units are unevenly divided between 4 different locations and types--10 units, 16 units, 18 units, & 20 units (some apartments, some duplexes, some small houses, all in the Salem, OR area). I've lately been thinking that it might be best for each party to take full and separate ownership of 2 locations each, then have the party with the larger share pay the other the difference in value. This is definitely something we'll discuss with an attorney. Does this sound reasonable?

My wife will be inheriting a 50% ownership (her sister the other half) of about 60 out-of-state rental units in the very near future. We all want to keep the properties and continue running the business and so I'm trying to educate myself as rapidly as I can (thank you BP!) since none of us have experience as real estate investors. Right now there are two broad areas that I haven't been able to find a great deal of info on:

1. What specific types of advisors we should be talking with? Obviously we should be setting up relationships with an attorney and a CPA, but are there folks in those fields who specialize in dealing with this type of issue, where two parties are inheriting and co-owning rental property and the attendant company?

2. Has anyone here on the forums gone through a similar experience? What are the pitfalls, points of stress, etc. that we might be likely to run into? My wife and sister-in-law will be going through a lot of emotional turmoil at the time this all takes place, and so I'm preparing to be the one who handles the business side of things and I'm trying to learn as much as I can ahead of time so we can not only handle their dad's legacy responsibly, but also grow it over time.

Thanks for your help!

Hey @Landon Hattan love to meet up with you sometime. I'll be heading up in March to take an initial look at the properties but our time is pretty impacted so I probably won't be able to on that trip. However, I'll look you up for the next time!

Nice to meet you all, and thanks for the tips.

Greetings all,

My wife and I will soon be newbie rental property owners. My father-in-law owns approximately 60 units in the Salem, OR area. Unfortunately he was recently diagnosed with advanced colon and liver cancer and given a very short time to live which means we will be co-inheriting the properties along with my sister-in-law. Consequently I've been devouring everything I can get my hands on and tearing through all the podcasts I can in order to educate myself as quickly as possible. Bigger Pockets was one of the first resources recommended to me, and it's been a gigantic help.

By way of background, we reside in Orange County, CA, and just within the last several months finally emerged from the smoking ruin of the Great Recession. In 2005 we bought our first property, a tiny 1-bedroom condo (no garage, no yard) for the same price that my parents paid for their brand-new two-story 3475 sq. ft home complete with swimming pool/spa in the same county only 10 years earlier. I FSBO'd our place myself 1.5 years later and turned a 30k profit as we moved up to a "spacious" 2BR condo. We were upwardly mobile and easily made the mortgage payment...but then the Great Recession happened. My wife and I both lost our long-time jobs within six months of our first child being born. After receiving approval to short sale the property and receiving an offer the first day it was on the market, the bank stonewalled for 11 months until the buyers finally pulled their money out and walked. Within two weeks, the home was sold at auction. I was so angry at the time that to this day I still haven't checked the records to see how much less the bank got for it than what our buyers had offered. Thankfully we had seen which way the wind was blowing and had already moved into a new home as renters. After living in survival mode for the last 5 years, we're finally back on track and able to save/invest more than a pittance each month.

It feels like we're being thrown into the deep end with no training, going from budgeting down to the last dollar every month, occasionally forced to rely on the generosity of friends and family, to being responsible for dozens of units within such a short time. Luckily I learn extremely quickly and my father-in-law employs a local property manager, so I suppose the important thing really is to learn how to manage the property manager, but there's still quite a bit of whiplash.

Anyway, I'm glad to find Bigger Pockets. I know I'll be relying on the information and community found here to help me manage (and grow) these assets responsibly. Thanks for taking the time to read!