Ryan Pemberton
Has anyone heard of a 26% rule on making an offer?
6 November 2015 | 16 replies
Has anyone every heard of analyzing a rental property by taking 26% (or 74% of the monthly rent) off the monthly rent and multiplying by 60 months to come up with an offer price?
Jacob Gehrin
Building a Portfolio of Numerous Properties
28 January 2016 | 15 replies
Just some idea of how some of you were able to continue multiplying additional units within a decent amount of time.
Kim Ford
SC Network
28 August 2018 | 125 replies
@John Semanchuk Here's an exact tax rate breakdown by county (2015): http://www.sccounties.org/Data/Sites/1/media/publications/propertytax2015.pdfFor everyone not familiar, using John's house example in Richland county, school district one would be $200,000 x 6% = $12,000Then multiply the county and school district millage rate at a total of 0.4321 x $12,000 = $5,185 straight to the tax man.
Kris Miller
Multi-Family Purchase Analysis
18 October 2017 | 14 replies
@Kris Miller my two cents and a simple formula is 50% rule.So if the net revenue is $10225x 12 =122700 divided by 2 is $61350 (NOI)multiply by 10 (cap rate which is variable depending on the situation of the building) So the strike price would be $613350.
Justin R.
Who uses a Delaware Statutory Trust?
29 January 2020 | 21 replies
@Cedric Ballet I hear what your saying, although 800 dollars multiplied by a few dozen properties, annually, does add up.
Courtney M.
$100 per door/cashflow
27 July 2018 | 106 replies
A price of a rental, as you know, is typically priced by taking the annual gross income and multiplying it by a gross rent multipler ( the nicer the area, the higher the multipler.)
Kim H.
Rehab Costs
22 November 2013 | 8 replies
It'd be only a $100-200 savings but multiply by 9 and you've got something pretty significant.
Andrew Bertram
Multi-Family Home/Apartment
22 June 2015 | 2 replies
Multiply that by the number of rooms in each unit and add up the total.
Kris Lippi
What would a typical premium be for short term furnished rentals?
3 March 2016 | 8 replies
The majority of your work as a small scale landlord is in the turnover and turnaround process (think re-prepping the unit, advertising, screening, onboarding the tenant, supervising move ins and move outs; then with short term rentals multiply that by 3 or 4 per year per unit.....!)
Mark Baldwin
Out of State BRRR from Hawaii
22 November 2017 | 6 replies
But unless you're genuinely kamaaina, your money will divide, not multiply.