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All Forum Posts by: Nzinga Young

Nzinga Young has started 2 posts and replied 20 times.

Post: (NY) FHA requirements/restrictions

Nzinga YoungPosted
  • Investor
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 95

A friend is in a similar situation. He bought his first home with a conventional loan and was told he can buy his second with FHA, but I don't know who told him and this was in NJ. Hopefully someone else has a more solid answer. Good luck!

@Calvin Thomas it's an increase in monthly rent payments. They pay first and security upfront and the last month in gradual payments in addition to the rent. Then they have essentially no rent to pay their last month.

@Philip Williams I'm in a C- neighborhood but very close to a train station to NYC. The OP and I are in similar areas so he can have the same positive experiences in any C-/D area with access to Manhattan. He also asked for potential solutions, so I gave them.

Post: Renting in bad neighborhoods

Nzinga YoungPosted
  • Investor
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 95

I'm not sure how you define "bad" but I would certainly invest in a low-income urban area. I wouldn't buy anywhere with a very high crime rate or that doesn't have access to anything appealing (schools, major employers, public transportation, etc). You need safety to mitigate risk and some local institution to attract quality tenants and have a house worth selling one day. There's lots of money to be made in C and D class areas, but you do have to draw the line somewhere. I'd only buy a house I'd be comfortable living in alone for 6 months.

I’ll break down my solutions to @Philip Williams great list of issues.

1. To get rent paid on time, I use Cozy and let them know rent will be paid through direct deposit when they’re viewing the house. Anyone with plans of not paying won’t want their rent automatically deducted from their account. They also won’t like that their Cozy payments impact their credit score. I also have a Sec 8 tenant so getting the rent is never a problem.

2. If you have a nice home, people won’t want to leave it. Do the work renovating the space before and you’ll have a “one in a million” property with grateful tenants and super low turnover. Also, do the math to see if it’s worth raising the rent every year and risking the tenants leaving. I have good ones and don’t plan on raising their rent for the first 4 years they’re with me.

3. Don’t ever bend your standards in the screening process. I haven’t ever had to, but I’d rather give up a month of rent to look longer than lower my standards. I ask for 3 months pay stubs, last three bank statements, copy of photo ID, and contact info for their employer and past two landlords. I do a background check but not a credit check. Poor credit is assumed. I don’t even run it since that would bring it down even lower. If they tell me it’s very low and they don’t have much in reserves but they do have a good income, I’ll have them pay first, last, and security upfront. The last month gets paid in monthly installments and added to their rent payments.

4. Like I said, credit isn’t a big deal to me. Just use the last months rent installment payments to protect yourself.

5. No reserves is always an issue. It surprises me every time tbh but it’s the nature of the environment. You can use the strategy above and make sure your reserves are strong. If they have low credit and no reserves, I’d only rent to them if there are two or more working adults in the home. Or if they have Sec 8.

6. C and D doesn’t mean the neighborhood is dangerous. Check the crime report. My rental is in a town right next door to Newark, NJ (very high crime rate) but my area is extremely safe. With that being said, I still have video cameras and motion sensor lights on every door. It’s more to make my tenants feel safe than anything.

7. I choose not to increase rent but I definitely could. And my house has gone up in value about $25k a year since I bought it. You can’t buy in just any lower grade neighborhood. I looked for one within 30 mins of Manhattan with lots of access to public transportation. Mine was one of 3 houses being renovated on the street, and there are three schools within walking distance. Make sure the home you get is near something noteworthy and you should be okay.

There’s a lot of money to be made in lower grade neighborhoods. I also think it’s important for *US* to own in communities of color, which are often (but not always) C and D areas. Good luck to you!

Post: When can I rent out my owner occupied house?

Nzinga YoungPosted
  • Investor
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 95

@Vee Vu is this an FHA loan? If so, I had to stay in my house for a year before renting it out.

@Matthew Dowling I own a two family in a C class neighborhood in Essex Co. 2br rents for $1325 (sec 8) and the 3br for $1600 (cash tenant). I could be getting $50-$75 more for each but I have dream tenants and choose not to increase their rent.

Look into East Orange. Not sure if it’s still going on but the city had some incentive for rehabbing the vacant homes in the area.

Post: Where are all the female investors and real estate agents?

Nzinga YoungPosted
  • Investor
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 95

@Jennifer Pauyo I love this thread! Buy and hold Sec 8 investor here. Based in Brooklyn, NY with a two family in NJ. I’m shopping around for a Baltimore purchase this year and would love to connect with other women in Maryland.

Post: My very first deal (2018)

Nzinga YoungPosted
  • Investor
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 95

Thank you @Marlen Weber! Not yet but I'll be buying in Baltimore this year.

Post: My very first deal (2018)

Nzinga YoungPosted
  • Investor
  • Brooklyn, NY
  • Posts 20
  • Votes 95

Investment Info:

Small multi-family (2-4 units) buy & hold investment.

Purchase price: $230,000
Cash invested: $9,500

I purchased a two family home (3br/1ba over 2br/1ba) in Essex Co. NJ in 2018. The goals were to finally go through with a deal and greatly cut down on my NYC cost of living. I went from paying $1300 a month just for a bedroom to $400 a month to live in the 2br unit.

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

I wanted to buy in a low-income community with a low crime rate that is within 30 mins of Manhattan. It was my first deal so I wanted something rent-ready, and since I'd be living there for the first year, I wanted it to be a place I'd be proud to call home.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

I searched MLS constantly looking for something in my budget. I had an excelled agent, but I knew he had clients with much deeper pockets and wouldn't have the time to find homes for me. I found this one, went to view it the next day, and made an offer $10k above asking the day after. We gave them 24 hours to decide and they accepted!

How did you finance this deal?

FHA loan.

What was the outcome?

I got incredible tenants! Super clean, quiet, and they pay on time. I honestly don't know the home's current value but the house next door sold for $255k without any renovations a few months after I bought mine.