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All Forum Posts by: Joseph Medina

Joseph Medina has started 17 posts and replied 72 times.

Post: Looking For Great Tax Books

Joseph MedinaPosted
  • Houston, Tx
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 35

awesome man I will check that out thanks for being up front with me! 

Post: Looking For Great Tax Books

Joseph MedinaPosted
  • Houston, Tx
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 35

Hey Guys, 

I have read Tom Wheelwright's Tax Free Wealth, BP's Amanda Han's Tax Books. I love learning about taxes so I am asking for great suggestions to read; however,  I am no CPA nor do I have a degree in accounting. So, please drop some great suggestions I would greatly appreciate it! 

Quote from @Bruce Woodruff:

@Joseph Medina Are you positive that you can't just go all STR? Are there any other competitors nearby that do STR all year round? Would a) be a lot simpler, b) avoid the whole tenant mess, and c) make you more money......

 @Bruce Woodruff, Yeah we could do that, my thought was the summer is the popping months high occupancy, money is good, you know basically making hay while the sun shines. But, as you, I live in a southern state ( I see you're based out of AZ), so I know the snow birds fly south for the winter. So, I imagine having them in the property during the winter to help out during the low months. its more or less a hedge aginst the winter months. 

I am currently still narrowing down the location we want to jump into. the great country of texas LOL is massive so we are looking more or less southern texas. i dont think there are many HOAs out there and the area is not new to STRs as its a poppin spot for the winter texans. 

so in a long winded way i dont know if there are year round STRs but once i do ill keep the post up dated! 

plus how can you tell if it is a year round BnB'er? 

Post: Houston Real Estate Investing Meetup

Joseph MedinaPosted
  • Houston, Tx
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 35

i would really like to attend the next event! 

Hey Guys, 

For my wife she is comfortable with STRs, but my heart desires multifamily properties.

So, while I work on acquistions of STR I want to start getting my name out there in the multi space here in houston, by attending meetups and groups. I would of gone to Ken McElorys Limitless event if i would of found out about it sooner! I definetly plan on attending 2023's event!

I am also down for flying to different states for some good acclaimed events just looking to get out there! anything helps! 

thanks a ton guys! 

Post: Learning how to analyze apartments

Joseph MedinaPosted
  • Houston, Tx
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 35
Quote from @Brian Adams:


@Travis McGray, I like simplicity. When first starting out on this journey, you only need to know two things, you need to know the actual NOI and market Cap Rate of the property to determine if you have a deal.

How to figure an apartment’s NOI

The first step to determine NOI is to calculate Total Income.

Total income is simply the total of all income streams from the property for the year and can include:
• Rents from the apartments themselves
• Laundry and vending machines
• Parking fees
• Late fees
• Any other income

For a simple working example, let’s say that we’re looking at a 100 unit complex where every unit rents for exactly $1,000 per month – ha ha, wouldn’t that be nice?

The complex has on-site laundry facilities and several vending machines that generate $1,000 per month in income.

Also, this complex features preferred parking spots for $100 per year and 50 units have them for an annual total of $5,000.

So what’s the Total Income?
1. 100 units X $1,000 per month = $1.2 million annually for rent income
2. $1,000 per month in laundry and vending = $12,000 annually
3. $5,000 parking fees annually

Our total income is $1,217,000 for this complex.

Now we can find the NOI by subtracting all the Expenses from the total income.

Here’s a list of potential expenses that an apartment complex might have:
Management fees
Maintenance
Trash collection
Landscaping
Pool service
Taxes and insurance
Accounting and legal
Utilities
Payroll

And NO…the mortgage payment of principal and interest are not considered an expense for calculating NOI.

Let’s say that all of our annual expenses on this 100 unit apartment complex comes out to about $517,000.

So what is our NOI?

$1,217,000 – $517,000 = $600,000

The NOI in this example is $600,000.

Figuring purchase price

Let’s say that we’re using a cap rate of 10 or expressed as a percentage – 10% (I am picking a 10 cap only as an example to show you how the math works)

We divide $600,000 by .10 and we get $6,000,000 as the purchase price or value for this apartment complex.

Do you see how important NOI is?

If we base the purchase price on total income it would be twice as high.

The true beauty of buying apartments is that the income after paying expenses determines value.

It’s all about the numbers.


 this is an amzing rundown. 

since we are seeing interest rates climb I think adding in exit caps might be a benefitial thing to consider, because your exit is someone else's entrance. 

Post: Learning how to analyze apartments

Joseph MedinaPosted
  • Houston, Tx
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 35
Quote from @Anthony Engel:


@Travis McGray

The BP book, The Hands-Off Investor (by Brian Burke, CEO, Praxis Capital) goes pretty deep into syndication terminologies, types, and a particular focus on underwriting. It contains several underwriting examples as well as ways to evaluate people, organizations, and offerings. I'm a newbie to syndications myself. Best of luck!


 I am so glad you put this up here, becasue I now know i need to read this!

Post: Learning how to analyze apartments

Joseph MedinaPosted
  • Houston, Tx
  • Posts 72
  • Votes 35
Quote from @Chris Seveney:
Quote from @Travis McGray:

@Chris Seveney You're definitely right about that! Do you know a way to learn how to analyze apartments? How different from SFH is it? Or is it the same concept when implementing the numbers?

I am about to talk to the owner of an 8 unit 690k deal in Texas about creative financing it in the sense I don't know how to do syndications as of yet

It is different and the type of building it is also plays a major role. Is it an 8 unit building or townhomes? Does it have a central heating and cooling plant or individual HVAC units. What type of roof and windows does it have? Do you have large parking and landscaping areas? The way I compare the two is owning and maintaining a car to a tractor trailer.

 you know i have heard this time and time again. 

1. many of the MF guys i listen to and read stay far away from flat roofs, which makes a ton of sense. 

2. some of them stay away from water chillers. 

Quote from @Luke Carl:

Sure. Super common with smaller properties in my markets. Yes you would want a lease for anything over 28 days in most states 


 thanks a million! i really apperciate the help. 

PS your wife's book is awesome and i bought both the E-book and hard copy! 

Quote from @Napoleon DeCiutiis:
Quote from @Joseph Medina:
Quote from @Napoleon DeCiutiis:

Joseph,


You can use the tenancy at will / month-to-month lease for your guests.  


 man this is gold thanks a ton! 


 Yessir! 


 like no joke i was reall over complicating the idea on how to float them, but the month to month thing put me way at ease. 

so let me ask, do i just keep the utilities in my name and charge the snowirds by just adding them into the rent agreement?