Chris Allen
First time property owner and landlord
24 June 2019 | 14 replies
@Chris Allen, if you want to be thorough, make sure to account for the following expenses:1) Mortgage2) Mortgage insurance (PMI or MIP) or FHA Risk base3) Property Taxes4) City Taxes5) HOA (Home Owner’s Association) Dues and Fees and Assessments6) Insurance a) Property Hazard Insurance (0.3-0.45%) b) Flood Insurance c) Earthquake Insurance d) Umbrella Insurance7) Vacancy Rate (usually 8% - the equivalent to one month a year, or 5-6% if multifamily and/or if experienced, if not use 8%)8) Utilities (you’ll have these if your tenant is not covering them and/or during vacancy) a) Water § Sewer § Garbage b) Electricity c) Natural Gas d) Propane9) General Maintenance (usually 5%) a) Upkeep § Landscaping b) Snow removal c) Repairs d) New Appliances e) Make ready10) Capital Expenditures (usually 5%, higher is the property is old and obsolete, less if fully rehabbed and all mechanicals and roof are new)11) Property Management (8%, even if you self manage, your time still has value and there might be a time when you'll want to be completely hands off or you'll not be able to do it, vacation, retirement, etc.), including...
Erik Perotti
Zillow Offers and BP crowd
21 August 2019 | 8 replies
@Erik PerottiMy projection is that the ibuyers will end up concentrating on houses needing little or moderate rehab, and pass on the more extensive renovations.The goal of the ibuyers is to disrupt the brokerage industry, not the fix n flip industry, although that could end up being a byproduct.Various platforms, disrupters, etc have tried to make real estate agency as obsolete as travel agents, so far with almost no success.The differences between consumer industries which have been successfully transferred to a platform basis, and residential real estate are profound.
Lance Queen
House flip not selling
7 August 2019 | 44 replies
Thats something Id consider functionality obsolete.
David Nacco
How do you handle reserves on your rentals?
4 August 2019 | 5 replies
@David Nacco - first make sure to account for the following expenses in your calculations:1) Mortgage2) Mortgage insurance (PMI or MIP) or FHA Risk base3) Property Taxes4) City Taxes5) HOA (Home Owner’s Association) Dues and Fees and Assessments6) Insurance a) Property Hazard Insurance (0.3-0.45%) b) Flood Insurance c) Earthquake Insurance d) Umbrella Insurance7) Vacancy Rate (usually 8% - the equivalent to one month a year, or 5-6% if multifamily and/or if experienced, if not use 8%)8) Utilities (you’ll have these if your tenant is not covering them and/or during vacancy) a) Water § Sewer § Garbage b) Electricity c) Natural Gas d) Propane9) General Maintenance (usually 5%) a) Upkeep § Landscaping b) Snow removal c) Repairs d) New Appliances e) Make ready10) Capital Expenditures (usually 5%, higher is the property is old and obsolete, less if fully rehabbed and all mechanicals and roof are new)11) Property Management (8%, even if you self manage, your time still has value and there might be a time when you'll want to be completely hands off or you'll not be able to do it, vacation, retirement, etc.), including...
Richard Merkuris
Interest in commercial property NN
18 August 2019 | 5 replies
If not during due diligence you should be getting a (PCR) property condition report outlining potential deficiencies and items of correction needed.Look at location of Dollar General with traffic counts, sight lines, access, population growth levels, income levels, crime reports, school systems, economic development department plans for the area, etc.If building is obsolete but rents are really low per sq ft and sitting on a nice piece of land then might have some upside in redevelopment in the future at higher rents.
Long Nguyen
New Investor Needing Help Analyzing Deal
3 May 2019 | 2 replies
Hi, based on these numbers, your cash flow would be obsolete.
Erica Gregory
How do you use BRRR w/bank financing?
5 May 2019 | 6 replies
Example of yes: old kitchen, everything is obsolete, walls are yellow with stains from cigarette smoke.
Travis Biziorek
Flipping and Wholesaling are Dead... RIP
26 May 2019 | 30 replies
No global corporation will have the local market knowledge to make flippers completely obsolete maybe the newbies and those who don't know what they're doing but the real flippers will adapt.
Michael Goldsmith
Are Zestimates as Inaccurate as We're Being Told They Are?
21 May 2019 | 36 replies
First of all, that's a logistical nightmare, and frankly, probably impossible as it would take so much time to learn all of that, that the demographics and market would shift under my feet and deem previous information I've gleaned to be obsolete.
Lee Stephens
What Expenses (IF ANY) Do You Cover on SFH's?
26 June 2019 | 28 replies
@Lee Stephens make sure to account for the following expenses in your calculations:1) Mortgage2) Mortgage insurance (PMI or MIP) or FHA Risk base3) Property Taxes4) City Taxes5) HOA (Home Owner’s Association) Dues and Fees and Assessments6) Insurance a) Property Hazard Insurance (0.3-0.45%) b) Flood Insurance c) Earthquake Insurance d) Umbrella Insurance7) Vacancy Rate (usually 8% - the equivalent to one month a year, or 5-6% if multifamily and/or if experienced, if not use 8%)8) Utilities (you’ll have these if your tenant is not covering them and/or during vacancy) a) Water § Sewer § Garbage b) Electricity c) Natural Gas d) Propane9) General Maintenance (usually 5%) a) Upkeep § Landscaping b) Snow removal c) Repairs d) New Appliances e) Make ready10) Capital Expenditures (usually 5%, higher is the property is old and obsolete, less if fully rehabbed and all mechanicals and roof are new)11) Property Management (8%, even if you self manage, your time still has value and there might be a time when you'll want to be completely hands off or you'll not be able to do it, vacation, retirement, etc.), including...