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13 November 2024 | 4 replies
Also, Buckhead is generally pretty expensive and when adding Condo fees, tough to cashflow significantly.
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11 November 2024 | 13 replies
Here are the numbers I know so far:Rents4 units all currently occupied on one year leases- #1: 1/1 $995 monthly- #2: 1/1 $995 monthly- #3: 1/1 $995 monthly- #4: 2/1 $1,100 monthly- Gross rents: $4,085 monthlyExpenses- $12,070 taxes annually- $350 monthly insurance (my estimate, they have liability only right now)- $175 monthly landscaping- $120 water (electrical on separate meters, tenant pays)- Total expenses: $1,651 monthlyNOI around $2,434 before vacancy, maintenance, and management (although i would likely self-manage these)Property needs about $50K in other repairs and udpates from what I can see.
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14 November 2024 | 8 replies
But still, within a few weeks you should have someone applying who is qualified from my experience - which is in Florida, not New York… but all things being equal demand works similarly.If marketed correctly now, it tends to point to price sensitivity (too expensive) relative to other similar offerings, or some other detractor as to location or convenience.
14 November 2024 | 13 replies
Budgeting: Many landlords use the 50 percent rule, which means that 50 percent of your rental income should go to covering fixed and variable expenses, other than the mortgage.4.
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11 November 2024 | 5 replies
@Jordyn GeggIf you mean like property manage then you would need to get licensed and insured for each property since this new LLC does not own themI would not take on the Burden or expense of setting up another LLC for something like this since it doesn’t gain you anythibg
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11 November 2024 | 5 replies
And although the expenses you stated feel like they're doable, these are only the expenses that you are currently aware of.
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13 November 2024 | 24 replies
Quick response and a fair cash-for-keys offer is still the fastest and least expensive way to get someone out who isn't paying.
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12 November 2024 | 18 replies
@Josh R. there is another option, one that would raise you're ROI too infinite, eliminate that finance rate too 0%, and via reduction in $-expense, increase cash-flow.
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13 November 2024 | 5 replies
I just consider it my expensive education.
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14 November 2024 | 22 replies
I've included an example below to help illustrate this.So different lenders have different rates (which do vary even for DSCR loans) but these are factors they all consider.See example below:DSCR < 1Principal + Interest = $1,700Taxes = $350, Insurance = $100, Association Dues = $50Total PITIA = $2200Rent = $2000DSCR = Rent/PITIA = 2000/2200 = 0.91Since the DSCR is 0.91, we know the expenses are greater than the income of the property.DSCR >1Principal + Interest = $1,500Taxes = $250, Insurance = $100, Association Dues = $25Total PITIA = $1875 Rent = $2300DSCR = Rent/PITIA = 2300/1875 = 1.23If a purchase, you also generally need reserves / savings to show you have 3-6 month payments of PITIA (principal / interest (mortgage payment), property taxes and insurance and HOA (if applicable).