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All Forum Posts by: Kristen Moore

Kristen Moore has started 3 posts and replied 7 times.

Thanks for the feedback!  Also, sorry- I didn't mean to make it sound like I was giving the legal advice.  That section under lease options was taken from another site.  I just wanted to get some feedback on it because I didn't realize that was the case. 

I have lived in my current home since 2010 (I have a mortgage with Wells Fargo-the loan was sold to them) but am looking at another house to move into.  I wanted to rent my current home and considered offering a rent to own option; however, I now have some concerns about doing so.  I found the information below and wanted to get some feedback on it.   Thanks! My interest rate is really good but the value of the house has dropped some so selling isn't the best option right now.

Lease options

Many gurus say you can get around the due-on-sale clause by doing a lease option instead of a sale. Wrong. Subparagraph (d) of the longer clause covered that. Now you have to look at the law itself [§1701j-3(d)(4)] to learn that the due-on-sale clause is triggered by any lease longer than three years. And it's triggered by any lease that contains an option to purchase the property, regardless of the length of the lease.

Thanks so much for all of the feedback!  It definitely helps hearing from others who have had experience with rentals.  I think I will run the numbers again with a lower offer, and see if I want to proceed. 

Thanks again!

Thanks for the input! I think it was a good experience seeing it.

I went to check out my first rental property opportunity today.  It's a 3 bedroom, 2 bath house built above several garages that I would also get the income from renting out. The property was built in 2004, and the same family has been renting the house since it was built. They plan on staying in the home, so I would not have to worry about getting new tenants. The house rents for $975 a month and the 4 garages are rented out already for an extra $200 a month.

I ran the numbers using a performa spreadsheet and would only have a monthly net cash flow of about $116-$137 (after expenses), if I get the property for 145,000 and have a 30 year mortgage. The property is assessed at just over 169,000, and I wouldn't have any initial rehab costs. The $116 - $137 monthly cash flow would be without having a property management company and with no vacancy accounted in because I already have a renter, and there has never been a vacancy since the property was built in 2004. I know that I should account for a vacancy though at some point. Is there a net cash flow that you would recommend making sure to stay above? I know it comes down to comfort level and that cash flow will eventually increase as the mortgage goes down, but I wasn't sure if there is a general rule of thumb for that to go by? The cash on cash return would be about 5%.

I have even thought about going in on it with someone else, but I would think that the cash flow would need to be a fair amount higher for that to be worthwhile. The nice part about that would be not having to put as much cash out and splitting repairs.  

I'd appreciate any suggestions or feedback that you can give me.  Thank-you!

Post: LLC's and licensing

Kristen MoorePosted
  • Cecilton, MD
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 4

Thanks so much for the feedback! I really appreciate it. 

Post: LLC's and licensing

Kristen MoorePosted
  • Cecilton, MD
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 4

I am new to real estate investing but am very excited about getting started. I plan to work mainly with 2 other people on deals, but I will also possibly be doing some deals separately, so I wanted to get advice about setting up an LLC vs multiple LLC's (one with the 3 of us listed and one with just me listed). Would you recommend us each having our own LLC to make taxes and everything less complicated, or can you only assign a property to a single LLC? If two of us are going to split the profits close to 50/50 and then give a small percentage to the 3rd partner, any recommendations on how to set things up?

Also, I live in Maryland and glanced over some information about licensing but didn't see anywhere that I would have to have a separate license for rehabbing or owning rental properties.  Does anyone know the specifics regarding to Maryland?  I am planning to rehab in both Maryland and Delaware.  

Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated! Thanks!