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All Forum Posts by: Justin Brooks

Justin Brooks has started 3 posts and replied 3 times.

Post: Senior Housing Development

Justin BrooksPosted
  • Developer
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 3

Investment Info:

Other commercial investment investment.

Purchase price: $360,000
Cash invested: $690,000

Senior housing is the fastest growing opportunity in the national housing market of which the Residential Assisted Living niche provides the highest quality personal care for seniors and provides investors excellent returns. Homes house 8-16 residents, paying $6,500-$7,500 per month. PEW Institute research has shown that the average return on investment for the senior housing/assisted living asset-class, substantially outperforms all others within the real estate sector.

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

My goal initially was to get into apartment buildings. I did not look at apartment buildings because of the trend, but because of the things that Robert K. and his advisors taught. Long story short, I saw a much lower acquisition cost for an assisted living home, but the returns were similar to that of an apartment that was 10x the comparable cost. Not to mention being able to operate a business that helps others. My goal is to impact others through these and other types of investments.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

Initially, the desire to create this came from my mom having a car accident and thinking, "man, what would have happened if she was not able to get around". The reality was, I didn't have an answer. I started searching for those answers that day and initially came up with an apartment building. The problem was that the acquisition cost for the part of the country I'd build in was astronomical. That's when I discovered senior housing and the rest is as they say history.

How did you finance this deal?

Syndicated funds and used SBA backed financing.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

This was a development project. A great rule of thumb is, developments will always cost more and take longer to develop.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

I had a host of team members help take on this project. I worked with other syndicators, architects, engineers, contractors, lenders, insurance agents and many more team members. Development is about assembling a great team and executing on the plan. A great team is priceless.

Post: Senior Housing Development

Justin BrooksPosted
  • Developer
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 3

Investment Info:

Other commercial investment investment.

Purchase price: $360,000
Cash invested: $690,000

Residential Assisted Living senior care homes are earning smart investors safe, secure, and reliable returns.

Senior housing is the fastest growing opportunity in the national housing market of which the Residential Assisted Living niche provides the highest quality personal care for seniors and provides investors excellent returns.

The elder population (those over 80) represents a rapidly growing percentage of the U.S. population. This demographic requires increasing assistance at this stage in their lives.

The need for quality attentive care will be further compounded by the aging Baby Boomer generation putting increasing demands on existing resources. In addition, there is also a growing “care gap.” These “care gaps” describe the changing trend that fewer family members are available to provide primary support to their loved ones, which further accelerates the need for competitive alternatives to the “big-box” institutional style housing facility.
 
The desire for a “home-style” environment and high quality of life is driving the desire for an alternative type of care that offers the best quality care for seniors, called a “Residential Assisted Living” home. By comparison, the typical “big-box” assisted living facility often leaves the resident feeling neglected and the staff overworked with resident to caregiver ratios commonly exceeding 10:1.

Today, with the average resident age in senior housing being 84, the aging Baby Boomer generation will continue pushing capacity demands from 2025 through 2050 as they reach that milestone. With their higher overall education and income levels, many of these future residents will be able to afford the option of paying for quality care in Residential Assisted Living care homes.
A typical Residential Assisted Living home will have 8-16 residents, each paying $6,500-$7,500 per month creating a significant cash flow for the investor/operator.

Residential Assisted Living homes are cost-effective to develop, often costing on the order of $50-$100k/room versus big-box facilities averaging over $150-$300k/room. Residential Assisted Living homes are proving to be a growing and lucrative niche for the real estate and health care investor/entrepreneur.

The senior housing industry is currently estimated at over $300 billion annually and growing rapidly. PEW Institute research has shown that the average return on investment for the senior housing/assisted living asset-class, substantially outperforms all others within the real estate sector.
 
Senior housing has been a very resilient portion of the housing demand with occupancy rates trending to over 90%. Even during the recent “Great Recession,” occupancy for this sector remained above 85%, their lowest in recent records.

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

My goal initially was to get into apartment buildings. I did not look at apartment buildings because of the trend, but because of the things that Robert K. and his advisors taught. Long story short, I saw a much lower acquisition cost for an assisted living home, but the returns were similar to that of an apartment that was 10x the comparable cost. Not to mention being able to operate a business that helps others. My goal is to impact others through these and other types of investments.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

Initially, the desire to create this came from my mom having a car accident and thinking, "man, what would have happened if she was not able to get around". The reality was, I didn't have an answer. I started searching for those answers that day and initially came up with an apartment building. The problem was that the acquisition cost for the part of the country I'd build in was astronomical. That's when I discovered senior housing and the rest is as they say history.

How did you finance this deal?

I syndicated funds and used SBA backed financing.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

This was a development project. A great rule of thumb is, developments will always cost more and take longer to develop.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

I had a host of team members help take on this project. I worked with other syndicators, architects, engineers, contractors, lenders, insurance agents and many more team members. Development is about assembling a great team and executing on the plan. A great team is priceless.

Post: House Hacked Before I knew what House Hacking Was

Justin BrooksPosted
  • Developer
  • Kansas City, MO
  • Posts 3
  • Votes 3

Investment Info:

Single-family residence buy & hold investment.

Purchase price: $174,900
Cash invested: $500
Sale price: $185,000

House Hacked before that was a term.
- I lived on one side of the duplex and managed the other side personally.
- Property managed and oversaw the repair of malfunctioning HVAC units, refrigerators and garage doors.
- Maintained contacts with vendors including landscaping, HVAC, plumbing and general contractors and handymen

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

The goal was to get my feet wet in property management so that I understood what it was like to lease up a space and manage a tenant. I also wanted to have my tenant pay for my mortgage, which is what happened.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

I did this deal in 2012 when you could find good deals on the internet. I did exactly what my then real estate coach told me to do. I called a local real estate office and asked for a real estate agent that was also an investor and I had that real estate agent help me through underwriting the deal. I paid 5k less than asking, and received pro-rated rents and all security deposits.

How did you finance this deal?

I used a VA loan to finance this deal.

How did you add value to the deal?

I ended up upgrading the light fixtures, the lawn, deck, A/C, upstairs and downstairs doors. This was a upper middle class rental neighborhood that maintained relatively nice exterior homes, so we ensured curb appeal was always maintained.

What was the outcome?

I ended up getting burned out on this deal and sold it prematurely. I sold it at a small increase in price, but over the years, I spent much of the excess gained on repairs and value add in the house.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

I learned to stretch with that project. The most challenging and scary part was when my A/C went out within a few months of me replacing the deck. I ended up spending nearly $10k that year on repairs and upgrades. If I had of been more savy, I would have asked for a credit at closing to help pay for some of the repairs on the deck.