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All Forum Posts by: Medi Sarwary

Medi Sarwary has started 1 posts and replied 73 times.

Post: Aggressive Pre-payment vs. BRRRR strategy?

Medi SarwaryPosted
  • Pleasanton, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 48

@Sam Shueh Thanks for the response, what do you mean by K income?

Post: Aggressive Pre-payment vs. BRRRR strategy?

Medi SarwaryPosted
  • Pleasanton, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 48

Hey everyone! 

I have been struggling with one aspect of the BRRR strategy which is the refinance after re-hab. I see a lot of value in aggressively paying down the mortgage with the excess cash flow and personal income. I see funneling income in this way as a form of paying yourself first and the bank last. Thinking of all the interest the bank will make even before the refinance is unsettling to say the least.

Here is a scenario:

300K home payed at 20% down-60K. Ideally we wouldn’t buy if it didn’t cash flow in the first place so I’m picking nice round numbers just for simplicity.

Loan is 240K 30 yr. fixed at 4.3%

Monthly payments are 1,500

Rental income 2,000

Cash flow is 500/month

If we use the cash flow to pay down the mortgage faster we can pay down the mortgage in ~ 17 years and save nearly 80K in interest paid on that loan.

Aggressively paying down the mortgage by supplementing the 500$ in cash flow with an additional $1,000 in personal income we would pay the mortgage of in approx. 10 years and save more than 120K in interest payments. In addition the rent would likely increase after the rehab so that 500 cash flow would be more likely 6-800.

I know the opportunity cost is significant, there are many things we could do with that extra 1,500 over the course of 10 years (180K). But the refinance would increase our interest payments and balloon the life of the loan. We would have to pay 120K in extra interest and risk being over leveraged. On the other side we would have more that 2k of additional cash flow and can always go back and refinance our equity if an opportunity arises.

I don't know if I'm thinking about this correctly (I suspect not) so I appreciate any feedback! It seems to me that the BRRRR strategy is most effective when done many times where the cash flow is so great that it compensates for the balloon loan.

Post: New investor in CA, looking to invest in the midwest

Medi SarwaryPosted
  • Pleasanton, CA
  • Posts 73
  • Votes 48

Hey Courtney, if you decide to invest in Michigan you should look at using the homestead tax credit on your potential property taxes. You would have to reach out to your network in MI but if you collaborate with them in some type of partnership I think it might be a good first investment tool to utilize.

You would minimize your risk by partnering, reduce your capitol expenditure, taxes and you'd have eyes andears on your investment. Although the returns would be lower, it may be worth it for the knowledge you'd gain. In any case your relationships in MI are a great asset if you decide to use them in some function.