Skip to content
×
PRO
Pro Members Get Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
$0
TODAY
$69.00/month when billed monthly.
$32.50/month when billed annually.
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here
Pick markets, find deals, analyze and manage properties. Try BiggerPockets PRO.
x
All Forum Categories
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

All Forum Posts by: Khoa Nguyen

Khoa Nguyen has started 2 posts and replied 4 times.

Post: How to Negotiate and Use Seller Concessions

Khoa NguyenPosted
  • New to Real Estate
  • presccott, AZ
  • Posts 4
  • Votes 5
Quote from @Ryan Thomson:

Concessions are a great way to make buying a home less expensive. There are a couple of ways you can use concessions and a couple of ways to get the seller to offer them. Here is an overview of concessions.

If you are able to negotiate concessions for the purchase of your house hack, here are the ways I would recommend using them:

     1. To cover closings costs

    Using them to cover closing costs is essentially as good as cash. You were going to have to pay for the closing costs with your own cash. Now the seller is covering those costs. You get to keep that cash and use it for something else.

         2. To help with the cost of house hacking improvements or conversions

      Another great way to use concessions is towards the conversion cost. If you are house hacking a property you more than likely want to convert a space into a bedroom or a basement into a separate unit. These conversions can be paid for with concessions from the seller. To do this you get a bid from a couple contractors to do the work you want done. Then you get a check to that contractor for some or all of the cost to convert the space. Pro Tip: ask the seller to break up the checks to a contractor into a couple of checks so you can do progress payments instead of paying the contractor the total amount upfront.

           3. Buying the interest rate down

        Your lender can help you determine if it is worth buying your interest rate down. A good rule of thumb though: you want to save enough interest in two years to cover the cost of buying the rate down. Why two years? This has been the common number for a long time because people have assumed that at some point in two years rates will be lower than they are today. I'm not so sure that works anymore. So, if you think rates will stay high and not be lower for 3 years or maybe 5 years than make sure the amount of interest you save in that amount of years will be more than the cost to buy it down.

        Now all of those ideas assumed you already negotiated concessions. But how does that process work? 

        Here are a few ways you can negotiate concessions with the seller:

             1. In the initial offer

          If the house is listed for 500k you could make an offer for any price you want and also put in the offer that the seller will give $X,XXX.00 amount of concessions to the seller at closing.

          A good strategy, if the market is competitive, is to offer above the asking price by the amount of concessions you want.

          For example, if the listing price is $500,000 and you want 10k of concessions. You can make an offer for 510k with 10k concessions. This gets you the cash you need now to cover closing costs or make a house hack improvement (bedroom addition or separate unit conversion). It also is the same net to the seller.

          Essentially you have locked in a loan for 10k at a fixed rate over 30 years. You threw it into the mortgage. That's a great deal for you. Especially if you use that money towards a house hack improvement that will generate more rental income.

          The one thing to be aware of here is that the higher you go with the offer price the less likely it will appraise.

               2. During the inspection negotiation period

            If there are plenty of items in the inspection that are concerning or a major cost, you could ask for concessions at this point in the closing process.

            I wouldn't start with concessions though. I would start by asking the seller to fix the problem and pay for it. Most sellers don't want to pay AND manage the problem. They will often counter with a concession.

            There are some limits to concessions.

                 1. Limitations about what they can be spent on:

              Concessions cannot go towards the down payment. Concessions cannot be kept as cash.

                   2. The amount of concessions you can receive is also limited depending on the type of loan you are using:

                VA loans have a maximum of 4% of the purchase price, no matter of down payment.

                FHA loans have a maximum of 6% of purchase price regardless of down payment.

                Conventional loan limits depend on the amount of the downpayment:

                • Less than 10% down = 3% maximum seller concession
                • 10-25% down = 6% maximum seller concession
                • 25% + down = 9% maximum seller concession

                 Hey Ryan, thank for the information.

                My question is that if the lender waives appraisal contigency, can we still get a seller concession ? 

                Post: new investor looking to maximize first house hacking

                Khoa NguyenPosted
                • New to Real Estate
                • presccott, AZ
                • Posts 4
                • Votes 5

                Hello everyone,

                I am new to the real estate realm and looking for advice. My goal is to start my real estate journey with house hacking. I currently work in health care profession so i plan to do mid term rental to nurse. i am currently sub-lease my apt so my rent is less than $500. I am debating whether it is worth it to buy a house (with 20% down) and rent out to the same tenant and get another tenant. I am currently living in Prescott Valley, Arizona. My thought process is that i am paying $1200 rent for a 2 beds 1 bath vs getting a $350000-$400000 3 beds 2 baths home with monthly payment of $2100-$2400 (PITI with 7% interest rate).

                I figure that it will be better to rent for now since if i am to buy a house, i need to find a renter who willing to pay 900-1200 without factoring any capex, maintenance and vacancy. In addition my COC return is $0 instead of investing $70000 (20% of 350k house) into a saving account with 5% yield sound like a bad investment to me. Can some expert help me understand the idea why would it benefit to buy than to rent ? appreciate all of your advices and help.

                p/s: i could potentially get a fixer upper for 280-300k and put in 20-30k to renovate (still a newbie at this aspect too), but it still do not worth it to buy in my opinion. 

                Post: new prescott valley real estate investor

                Khoa NguyenPosted
                • New to Real Estate
                • presccott, AZ
                • Posts 4
                • Votes 5

                Hello Everyone,

                I am new to the real estate world. I am trying to save up to buy early spring next year. I am planning to do a house hack for my 1st primary home. I am looking for a mentor to help me do some analysis for a home and way to find deals outside of the normal website (zillow, redfin, etc.). I have been listening to on the market podcast, real estate rookie, and some BP podcasts.  I hope to get to meet and greet with other who are just starting out new like me to learn and grow my real estate investment strategy. Thank you everyone :D 

                Post: LIVE: Biggest obstacle to buying your first investment property?

                Khoa NguyenPosted
                • New to Real Estate
                • presccott, AZ
                • Posts 4
                • Votes 5

                newbie here. Loved all the interesting topic that people ask. I am still very new to the whole process of Real Estate Investing. I currently just want to start to analyze deal form Zillow and Reffin and get familiar with all the numbers. My goal is to find a good place to house hack. I live in Prescott AZ so anywhere around there would be best but Prescott house is still extremely hot market. I want to do FHA loan if anyone has any good audio/book to read about it, please feel free to recommend. I know BP rookie podcast has recently has a REI meet up and would love to find more information about the next meet up. I love to travel around and make connection especially in the real estate world. I strongly believe that knowledge and timing is power in any business and would love to learn from all the expert.