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20 February 2025 | 5 replies
Your ability to turn around a property with an 11% cap rate is a pretty strong selling point.
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18 February 2025 | 4 replies
Quote from @Fernando Martin-Gullans: Hey y’all, I’m a retail investor with 2 SFH rentals worth a combined ~$650k looking to utilize some of my stored equity to buy more out-of-state properties, but I’m not quite sure how best to proceed given that my interest rates are incredibly low (leaning me away from refinancing) and neither property is owner-occupied (which I believe prevents me from using a HELOC).
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18 February 2025 | 2 replies
This creates two loan payments ($100,000 of equity and $300,000 on the new mortgage).Key NumbersHome Equity Loan Interest Rate: 6%Mortgage Interest Rate: 7%Rental Income: $3,000 per monthExpenses (management, taxes, insurance, maintenance): $800 per monthIncome and ExpensesMonthly Rental Income: $3,000Monthly Expenses: $800Monthly Mortgage Payment: $2,000ExplanationThe investor earns $3,000 in rent each month.They pay $2,000 on the investment property mortgage and $800 on other expenses.This leaves $200 profit each month or $2,400 per year.However, you have to pay $6,000 interest on the equity borrowed.This leaves you with an annual loss of $3,600.While the rental property generates positive monthly income, the interest cost of borrowing the initial $100,000 results in an overall loss.
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25 February 2025 | 11 replies
Do Florida rentals still pencil out with current insurance rates?
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20 February 2025 | 1 reply
Peak months (winter/snowbird season) see higher rates, while summer and hurricane season may dip.
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16 February 2025 | 2 replies
(I also don't understand how you have a hard money loan with a rate of 7.25%...)offering an equity position that you then buy out in just a few years seems like way too much complexity and risk when you say you just need 30K.
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22 February 2025 | 0 replies
There are a few more “big ticket” items that need to be considered (Minisplits & landscaping) but most of the major costs have already been accounted for on this property.We currently have a 30 year conventional mortgage with a 7.125% rate on a purchase price of $750k.
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11 February 2025 | 7 replies
Where are you seeing the 30-year fixed rates at 5.25-6%?
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21 February 2025 | 12 replies
If $100-$120 aligns with similar properties, then it’s a fair rate—especially considering the size of the home and the work involved.
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19 February 2025 | 27 replies
(To clarify, the metric I'm talking about isn't true cash-on-cash or cap rate, under strict definitions.