
2 December 2024 | 4 replies
Net Income: 100k~ depending on overtime workedHere is a breakdown of the potential property we would be looking at buying as a long term investment. 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, 1000sqft, attach single car garage, fully fenced property, needs no work and would be in a state of immediate ready to rent.Purchase Price: $289,90020% Down payment: $57,980Mortgage Rate: 4.5% Amortization: 25 YearsProperty Tax: $3185 annuallyBi-weekly Mortgage Payment: $592Rental Details:Monthly Rent: $2600Mortgage: -$1184/monthProperty Manager: -$260/monthLandlord Insurance: -$105/monthProperty Tax: -$265/month15% Put Away: -$390Leftover: $396Does something like this make sense to jump on?

2 December 2024 | 34 replies
Most people never actually buy the home, so they forfeit the down payment and move.

2 December 2024 | 21 replies
The mortgage payment is already high and my life circumstances have changed, making the payment even more of a stretch (not impossible, but definitely above the recommended percentage of take home pay).I am considering selling the first property next year (which has about $200K in equity) to do a mortgage recast on the primary and get my payment to something more reasonable.

8 December 2024 | 26 replies
The biggest downsides are that they usually have higher rates and require larger down payments.

5 December 2024 | 34 replies
I feel like it's more likely I would just have a lower taxable income, but still have to pay mostly the full 29k, which would make the monthly payment closer to $200.

3 December 2024 | 5 replies
Finally, ask about pre-payment penalties and do not ignore them as rates might fall in the future.

3 December 2024 | 1 reply
Purchase price: $242,500 Sale price: $430,000 I used private lending to cover the down payment and closing costs, then paired it with a hard money loan to fund the project.

4 December 2024 | 8 replies
We have created an investment plan for them to buy shares of a property, against what we put down for an initial down payment, so it accelerates there returns.

9 December 2024 | 98 replies
Nobody cares about libertarian political philosophies like decentralization and peer-to-peer payments when they can't afford to buy groceries this week because the value of Bitcoin is moved 20% in 2 days.

3 December 2024 | 9 replies
@Tom Stevensonyes, when I BRRRR I typically use my own cash for the down payment, and a hard money loan for the balance.