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All Forum Posts by: Michele Z.

Michele Z. has started 10 posts and replied 84 times.

Post: Augusta GA buy & hold with a catch - any ideas?

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

I see that somehow I posted this in the New member forum, instead of my local. :(  I'm not familiar with what I need to do to move it, or to delete it and repost.

Post: Augusta GA buy & hold with a catch - any ideas?

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

@Eli Poesnecker - yes, we are aware. Unfortunately, you can use the entire amount in one go (and usually need even more) in that market.

Post: Account organization when first starting out

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

Thank you for the confirmation, @Chris Coleman.

Post: Augusta GA buy & hold with a catch - any ideas?

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

Hi Augusta peeps,

Active duty family relocating to Augusta, GA - for a year - this June. We've been advised to look for something that only requires cosmetic updates on our first time out. We've also been told not to look S of Gate 1 since we'll be initially living in the property.

Looking to do a min 4+2 SFH ranch buy & hold that we (family w/ 1 toddler and 1 elder big dog) need to owner occupy and rent 2 rooms out for about a year before turning it into a STR/military crash pad or LTR. Conventional mortgage b/c we're saving our VA Loan for D.C. Great credit scores, no current debt.

We want to rent out two rooms to more than cover the PITI on this property so that we can use our BAH and remaining capital for some BRRRR investment(s) in the area so we can get that capital back out when we move, likely to the DC area, in 2021.

For the sake of round numbers, let's say we have $40k liquid to play with after reserving money for closing costs of the first property and 6 mos of rent reserves. Have access to a NFCU CLOC for $15k plus credit cards to fund rehab. I hoped we'd be able to find something and only put around <$20k down on the mortgage. Thought we could refi before we left to get at least the rehab money out - especially if we buy a place early b/c we need rehab before we can occupy.  1 year of seasoning would complete approx 4-6 mos before we pcs out again, so the timing seemed to work and I'd of course discuss the refi with our lender ahead of time.

I think I've seen (virtually as we're out of state) most of the MLS inventory in the Grovetown/Evans/Martinez/West Augusta area, thanks to our agent. Things are seeming to break into 3 categories.

a) "Working class" 4+2s that are really tiny bedroom 3+2s with poor garage conversions (so a random 4th "bedroom" off a kitchen, nowhere near bathrooms) or horribly awkward floor plans. They need bathroom additions and/or walls to come down.

b) 4+2s with potential in such poor and/or original condition (60s/70s/80s) that they require major rehabs (over $50k) with something going on in every sq ft of the house. We're talking kitchen, bathrooms, all paint and flooring, fixtures, often new roof/hvac/water heater/appliances (or some combination thereof) and some exterior work too.

c) Everything else "middle class" seems $220k-$250k+ mark (often still quite dated) and are therefore too expensive to cash flow at my budget level.

My most promising option I'd be comfortable offering $165k and paying my own closing costs. Remodel isn't complete so I can force a little equity, but the majority of the update has been done. Even after jacking up rent to the very high end of what might be possible, I cash flow but only get a COC return of 5%. If I refi this later I could lose the cash flow.

Is this just the way deals work in this area?

What am I missing. I'm feeling I need to realign my expectations. Or is it just that winter inventory is slim right now?
It's starting to feel like we just don't have enough money to buy this weird owner occupy hybrid situation and have the money to do a lower income neighborhood BRRRR. But if I just put all our eggs in one basket, how to I get money clear to take on DC next?

I have to find something, we have orders and will arrive come hell or high water in June. And we have a 60lb dog, so we can't really just rent and wait for the next market. What a waste that would be! There must be a way.

Any insight is appreciated.

Post: Structuring of private money deals with a partner

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

@Ankush Ratwani - there's a recent thread I just finished reading that covers a lot of what you're asking. 


https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/49/topics/790377-why-i-love-private-money-lenders?page=1



Post: REI, Taxes and Military

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

@Basit Siddiqi - yes, but I think this is the last year we will technically have legal residence in different states. They finally changed the rules and will allow spouses not from the same home state to take on the serviceperson's home of record state. We just need to find time to fly in and get documentation taken care of.

Post: REI, Taxes and Military

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

I'm wondering about the difference between a CPA/EA and fiduciary financial planner who understands real estate investing, or invests themselves. Perhaps a fee-only financial planner is the solution to this particular problem?

Post: Account organization when first starting out

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

Hello BPers!

Quick question. Looking to purchase our first property by April/May of this year. Assuming it's bet to make sure that funds for REI don't co-mingle with private funds from the get go, but I also feel it's a bit early to be running out to get business accounts.

We have a NFCU checking and savings account that are already connected to our main accounts at another bank (so transfer can easily be made), but we do not really use the NFCU accounts at all right now. Would it be appropriate to make use of them now and earmark them for real estate funds?

Would be nice to use them as we initially opened the accounts years ago in preparation for using NFCU for a residential mortgage before we learned there were better options available and before we decided to start investing in this fashion. We also have a LOC through NFCU that we would probably use for rehab funds, and it would be convenient to be able to pay that back from an internal account.

Is it also wise to do the same thing with credit cards? Earmark specific cards for real estate use and keep that 100% separate from personal cards?

Thanks for your comments. :)

Post: REI, Taxes and Military

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

It's tax time of year!

We're new to investing and will be purchasing our first property this year. Since we're hoping to acquire multiple properties we felt it was time to look for someone new to do our taxes and provide advice for financial planning and future REI. But we're a bit confused and aren't sure exactly which type of tax professional fits our needs.

Now for the fun part, we're an active duty military family, so we move around. We're looking for someone who works remotely and is familiar with military life. At the moment, he's a resident of one state, and I'm a resident of another. We currently live in Brooklyn but will be heading to Augusta, GA later this year. 

This year's taxes shouldn't be too hard, we don't itemize yet. But we do need to talk about changing our systems to accommodate itemization for 2020. We also need to make a plan for setting up a trust for our son and have been unsuccessful finding an attorney or planner to work with our situation. Multiple residencies seems to throw many people for a loop.

Definitely looking for someone who looks at the big picture.

I have one lead for an enrolled agent, but I'm not that familiar with that designation. Would a CPA fit what we're looking for? Is there another title I should be looking for?  Any guidance is appreciated. I think I need to be pointed in the right direction for further research.

Thank you!

Post: Pay of debt or buy a STR?

Michele Z.Posted
  • New to Real Estate
  • Augusta, GA
  • Posts 96
  • Votes 34

How silly, I forgot to tag you, my apoligies. @Katie Ferguson