
3 July 2024 | 8 replies
I'm sure you are already beating yourself up about not doing the background work.

3 July 2024 | 8 replies
You would probably need to be at 75%-80% LTV to make it work on a DSCR.

3 July 2024 | 4 replies
We use a national supply house for everything and do mostly builder grade with upgrades where they need to be at.

4 July 2024 | 18 replies
I think just about anywhere in northern MI is going to be at least fair to good for STR as there's mushroom hunters in the spring, summer vacationers, fall colors and deer hunters and winter sports.

3 July 2024 | 7 replies
The garage doors get beat up by the tenants when they run into them frequently.Generally speaking they are good investments as you have more options with the kind of tenants you can get to fill these spaces.

3 July 2024 | 7 replies
Makes it very hard to do multiple at a time, you could utilize a wide variety of loan options to scale faster but I wouldn’t recommend going max leverage on them.

2 July 2024 | 7 replies
Invested in basic index funds and paid down my mortgage faster than required (11 years off the mortgage by year 6).

2 July 2024 | 7 replies
Good stuff - you are pretty spot on - technically people max out under conventional loans at 10 - but oftentimes its with fewer properties as people run into hurdles before hitting 10, some of which you mention - wanting to diversify strategies, multifamilies, needing LLCs etc.I think you are on the right track for DSCR Loans - I always say that DSCR is really perfect for people in the 5-50 property range - typically conventional is the best fit with your first few, and then when ready to make the "jump" to scaling bigger and faster - DSCR is the best bet.

3 July 2024 | 14 replies
Looking at the photos, those surfaces are totally serviceable and any change would be cosmetic in nature.I would let the tenant know that small cosmetic changes like decorations are fine, but larger or not-easily-reversible ones like painting a driveway need owner approval and would be at tenant cost.

3 July 2024 | 3 replies
I'm willing to leave the property empty for a year to take advantage of owner occupied loans, if that's possible.Here are my estimates..Property: 1,355 sq ft, | 3br 2bath | 8,500 sq ft lotComps / ARV: 500-560k ~ 530kTotal Needed: 340-400k ~370kSale Price: 270-310k ~ 290kRenovations: 70-90k ~ 80kSevere cleaning needed (doing myself)Severe landscaping needed, it's a jungleI'd like to maximize potential value and be at the top of in-area comps, so would like to do a full gutCash on hand: 20k - 30k------------I'm considering,- Seller financing + separate renovation loan- FHA 203K (BRRR)- Fannie Mae Homestyle Renovation (if down payment is below 5%) (BRRR)------------Seller Financing + Separate Renovation LoanPros:Low down payment (via seller willingness) <= 3%Low interest rate (via seller willingness) <= 3%Cons:I'm unaware of how I can finance rehab without a personal loanMust cash-out refinance to obtain equity, conventional loan rate will not be as good------------FHA 203KPros:Low down paymentBundles rehab costsCons:Higher interest rate than the seller financed loanMust cash-out refinance in order to obtain equity and make an investment property------------Fannie Mae Homestyle RenovationPros:Bundles rehab costsCons:Higher interest rate than the seller financed loanMust cash-out refinance in order to obtain equity and make an investment property------------I may be totally off on what would be optimal here but wanted to provide my current thoughts.