All Forum Posts by: Levi Klein
Levi Klein has started 10 posts and replied 25 times.
Post: What I wish Pace Morby would have told me

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
Quote from @Zachary McDonough:
Quote from @Vince Mayer:
This is not a sub 2 deal. This is a VA assumption.
Explain how they are different. I must be ignorant. Because upon talking with Pace Morby students, I was under the impression that it is a form of sub to.
Zachary-This is no doubt a creative way for a good deal. However the other members are correct in stating this is an assumption of a loan and not a subject-to existing financing purchase. A subto doesn't involve you being underwritten by a bank and can be completed in as little as a few days. the loan stays in the sellers name and the DOT(deed of trust/receipt for property) goes in your name. Seller still has the loan, you make their payments, the house is owned by you the debt is owned by seller.
Post: PREHAB not rehab for $40,000 in 2 weeks

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
Investment Info:
Single-family residence fix & flip investment.
Purchase price: $252,858
Cash invested: $16,428
Sale price: $310,000
Project took 3 months (2wks work). House had a failed septic We demoed the entire place incld casework. The lower 2 feet of drywall and all the flooring was removed from the 5 small dogs marking everywhere. Repairs we did were minimal except for the failed septic which costed a few thousand dollars. We had the exterior painted and the new drywall taped (ready for texture). The house was ready to be put back together when we sold to an eager investor who will also profit when done. #WINWIN4ALL
What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?
I can't take credit for the prehab idea because I heard it from one of the podcasts. We purchased this property as a fix & flip.
How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?
Was contacted by the seller who needed cash to move out of state quickly after a job loss.
How did you finance this deal?
We paid for this deal out of a HELOC on our primary for ease of transaction with plans to Pull a HELOC on the investment after essential repairs were completed.
How did you add value to the deal?
demoed and exterior paint plus made the septic repairs to be functional.
What was the outcome?
quick tidy profit after the prehab
Lessons learned? Challenges?
Some times a quick profit is better than a big profit.
Post: PREHAB not rehab for $40,000 in 2 weeks

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
Investment Info:
Single-family residence fix & flip investment.
Purchase price: $252,858
Cash invested: $16,428
Sale price: $310,000
PreHab is awesome. This project took us 3 months (2 weeks of actual work). I can't take credit for the prehab idea because I heard it from one of the podcasts. This was one of my biggest returns on energy. We basically had 2 weeks into this house over the 3 months we owned it. The house had a failed septic a terrible interior smell from the 5 terriers that weren't allowed to use the yard as a toilet. We demoed the entire place. The lower 2 feet of drywall and all the flooring was removed from the dogs marking everywhere. The repairs we did were minimal except for the septic repair which costed a few thousand dollars. We had the exterior painted and the new drywall taped (ready for texture). The house was ready to be put back together. It turns out if you sell the home when it needs to be finished to a fellow investor it can be a win-win for all. We made a tidy little $40k profit while leaving meat on the bone for the next guy. I guarantee the effort and dollars the next investor spends will be much more than ours but they will get the bulk of the profit for their effort. We could have wholesaled this home as soon as we purchased and made $10,000. However, by doing the basic repairs and getting it to the cosmetic finishes gave us $2 for every $1 we put in. By selling early to an investor we didn't need to worry about the house sitting on the market waiting for a buyer while we pay carrying costs at the end of the project, that risk shifted to the next investor. This worked out great for us on this one. I don't believe prehab is the ideal method to build your systems around and we think it will only work on some of our investments in this area. That being said I would do it again in a heartbeat so long as there is enough profit in the deal to share with the next guy. Bonus when this does work out for the investor we sold the home to he will be chomping at the bit for the next one. This home worked out great for everyone.
What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?
I can't take credit for the prehab idea because I heard it from one of the podcasts. We purchased this property as a fix & flip.
How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?
Was contacted by the seller who needed cash to move out of state quickly after a job loss.
How did you finance this deal?
We paid for this deal out of a HELOC on our primary for ease of transaction with plans to Pull a HELOC on the investment after essential repairs were completed.
How did you add value to the deal?
demoed and exterior paint plus made the septic repairs to be functional.
What was the outcome?
quick tidy profit after the prehab
Lessons learned? Challenges?
Some times a quick profit is better than a big profit.
Post: First 5 actions you took to be a real estate investor?

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
@Edwin Campos
Step1) I notice others building wealth in RE.
Step2) I decided I wanted to wealthy too in RE.
Step3) I TOOK ACTION to find a property.
Step4) I found a property.
Step5) I bought it.
Post: !!!$200,000 PROFIT!!! on 10month flip

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
Originally posted by @Bill Goodland:
@Levi Klein awesome job. Do you have the listing or some interior pics you could share?
The Northwest Multiple Listing number is 1403808 if you would like to see more pics
Post: !!!$200,000 PROFIT!!! on 10month flip

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
Originally posted by @Kai Van Leuven:
@Levi Klein
Nice job man! You made it happen in the high end. That is pretty hard to do!
BTW- Are you related to all of the Klein’s that own all the mobile home parks in that area?
Yes Jim is my dad's brothers and he has been quite successful from Washington to California with the mobiles. I would love to get into that market if the opportunity arises
Post: !!!$200,000 PROFIT!!! on 10month flip

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
@elbert dockery
Great idea. We actually used the money to pay off what was left on our primary residence then immediately pulled a very large HELOC on it to simplify our borrowing process on cash purchases. After acquisition we do a cash out refi if necessary and return the money on our primary. No UW necessary on purchasres 3 day closings are possible it works out great. Our money and home is a little more at risk but we save thousands in carry costs and aquistion points with this strategy so the benefits outway the risks for us, so long as we have mutliple exit strategies going into a deal.
Post: !!!$200,000 PROFIT!!! on 10month flip

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
@jay dang
The house sold the 1st day it hit the market for over list price too!
Post: !!!$200,000 PROFIT!!! on 10month flip

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
Thanks @Chance Thurman ! i would wouldnt recommend banking on market appreciation but we definitely have benefited from it 6 years running. We just keep running the numbers for todays market not tomorrows and are pleasantly durprised deal after deal
Post: !!!$200,000 PROFIT!!! on our 10-month flip

- Real Estate Agent
- Arlington/Marysville, WA
- Posts 27
- Votes 39
That on Hilton Lake in Everett