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All Forum Posts by: Jim Huang

Jim Huang has started 1 posts and replied 3 times.

Post: real estate investment in Ann Arbor

Jim HuangPosted
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 1

Thanks for your responses! 

It looks like after reading through this: https://www.a2gov.org/departme... The AA property tax picture is fairly ... convoluted. 

My current understanding: Let's say a house is on the market for $800k, and it has an SEV of $200k. Once I purchase the place, I will trigger a new tax assessment. 

My prior assumption was, the taxable value of this house will be set to $800k. And doing a back of envelope math of 50% down to SEV, then ~69 mills rate (18 mills added for investment property) means ~$28k in tax footprint.

My current understanding is: The Taxable value of the house will be subjected to re-assessment. But it does not mean it'll re-assess to the sales price. The assessor has to assess it based on other similar properties with their SEV. So it is unlikely the $800k-bought house will come close to $400k SEV. It'll likely be much lower.

Of course - on subsequent years the property tax footprint can rise by no more than 5% YoY.

I'm trying to dial in my P&L here, so if I do find a decent investment property option, the math can be done quickly and I can get moving quickly. Thanks for your feedback and information again!

Jim

Post: real estate investment in Ann Arbor

Jim HuangPosted
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 1

I realized I may be way off on property tax here in AA. =)

Some internet search yielded the following formula to estimate tax:

For a house that I purchase at $800k. My property tax would be: 

$800k * 0.5 * 0.06954 = ~$28k. 

Is this... true? This would imply AA has an effective tax rate of ~3.5% for an investment property

Post: real estate investment in Ann Arbor

Jim HuangPosted
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 1

Hi everyone,

I am an out of town Michigan alum that's contemplating buying a SFR/Duplex as an real estate investment in Ann Arbor, preferably close to central campus and/or close to one of the University bus stops.

There are a couple opportunities thats on MLS currently, and I am crunching through my math and it seems to work out well (positive cash flow, decent cap rate).

Some key assumptions I hope still holds true today:  low vacancy rate in general. ~1000-1200/month for a room in a single family house / duplex. Year long lease typically, with subletting allowed to offset summer months cost to tenant.

I worked out some high-level math: Assuming there is a 6 bedroom single family house for sale for 800k, and I can rent for 6k/month.

Financing: 350k cash, 450k loan @30yr, 3.8%.

Assumptions: 7% vacancy/yr, $4000/yr repairs, $10k/yr property tax, $4k/yr insurance, 8% management fee+50% first month rent on new lease

Month-to-month breakdown: 

Income: $6000

Vacancy, Mgmt fee, repair, taxes, insurance: $2300

Loan PI: $2650

I'd take home ~$1000/month. 

It's not super amazing returns, but at the same time - it seems like a fairly low risk investment with Ann Arbor's large student body and continued demand for off campus living. 

My budget is up to ~$2M for the property. So while the example above is for a 800k property. I think the math should scale (i.e. for ~$2M I should be getting >12 bedrooms minimum).

Does anyone have experiencing owning investment properties near UofM central campus, and/or as a property manager, that can comment on how the rental market has been for the past decade plus (stability, concerns, etc.)? 

Thanks!

Jim