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All Forum Posts by: Tim Grandy

Tim Grandy has started 1 posts and replied 2 times.

Post: One Property, Two Separate Insurance Policies

Tim Grandy
Pro Member
Posted
  • Posts 2
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I am running into a similar situation with my rental. The main house, I used to live in, and the garage apartment was rented out. In my policy it was covered as other structures, which was fine because it is in bad shape and not worth much anyways. Now that I am renting out the main house to tenants as well, they want me to do two separate policies, one for the main house, one for the garage apartment (same parcel as yours was) but the garage apartment is virtually un-insurable. Any advice?

Post: House hack / historic renovation

Tim Grandy
Pro Member
Posted
  • Posts 2
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Investment Info:

Small multi-family (2-4 units) other investment.

Purchase price: $142,000
Cash invested: $165,000

Completely renovated this historic bungalow. House hacked for 4 years, by renting out the garage apartment while I lived in the main house. I did the entire main house renovation myself while also living in the house.

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

I have always wanted to renovate an old historic house. I knew the neighborhood was on the rise when I bought it so I knew the upside equity potential was only going up.

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

MLS. I had to offer over asking ($118K asking, paid $142K) and I had to put in $5000 earnest money. I also put the offer as cash (even though I was using a conventional loan) with no contingencies and as-is, no inspection. It was a major risk, but I knew it needed to be totally gutted anyways, and there were multiple offers in a rapidly growing market. I saw the potential in the property!

How did you finance this deal?

Conventional loan 20% down

How did you add value to the deal?

Cash offer, no inspection, no contingencies, no inspection, as - is.

What was the outcome?

Accepted the offer. House is now renovated and worth about $475,000!

Lessons learned? Challenges?

I could write a book on the lessons learned and challenges of this house! It would've made a great HGTV show. Lesson #1, totally gutting a home and rebuilding a 100 year old home is far more work than you can ever imagine, and TV does not even come close to reality when they show a house renovated in 60 minutes. It becomes your life, every spare moment, weekend and holiday is spent on the house. This was not only a physical challenge, but even more so it was a mental challenge to complete.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

I worked with Carter Clarke IV and his knowledge of the area and connections made the deal possible.