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3 February 2025 | 8 replies
We’re looking to increase our lifestyle through the decrease in housing and built a little passive income medium term.
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31 January 2025 | 5 replies
If you are looking at this property from a residential and rental perspective, then it may work as long as you are willing to put your own income into the property.
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19 February 2025 | 32 replies
@Byoung Bae would NOT recommend an inexperienced investor try to DIY manage OOS anything other than a Class A rental.The odds are against you and you will statistically lose a LOT of money.Read below for some friendly advice:-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Recommend you first figure out the property Class you want to invest in, THEN figure out the corresponding location to invest in.Property Class will typically dictate the Class of tenant you get, which greatly IMPACTS rental income stability and property maintenance/damage by tenants.If you apply Class A assumptions to a Class B or C purchase, your expectations won’t be met and it may be a financial disaster.If you buy/renovate a property in Class D area to Class A standards, what quality of tenant will you get?
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3 February 2025 | 12 replies
More on DSCR loans: DSCR loans won't use your income to underwrite the loan.
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2 February 2025 | 9 replies
As you know, marketing and price are both very important, and vacancy will significantly impact your income, so you are almost always better off charging a lower price and getting it filled with a good tenant.
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7 February 2025 | 10 replies
@Paul De Luca PITI 11.4k, Gross Income (once I move out) 12.5k
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29 January 2025 | 9 replies
However, when you combine the income from both the units, I think you will end up with more income after a year or two than with a SFH renting by the room.
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27 January 2025 | 6 replies
Also, focus on 2 years of job/income stability.Class D Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, all cashflow with little, maybe even negative, relative rent & value appreciationVacancy Est: 20%+ should be used to cover nonpayment, evictions & damages.Tenant Pool: majority will have FICO scores under 560 (almost 30% probability of default), little to no good tradelines, lots of collections & chargeoffs, recent evictions.
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14 February 2025 | 15 replies
As a savings of a few thousand dollars on furniture, could determine if your occupancy rate is 65% versus 70%...If the revenue is $50,000/yr that's $2,500 in one year (which could be the breakeven for that specific line-item expense).To determine you total breakeven point occupancy rate, and not just related to the furniture, take your operating expenses plus your debt service and divide it by your effective gross income.
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28 January 2025 | 10 replies
I paid for the subscription for a few months and drew my own custom Google maps areas and color coded them red/yellow/green based on a "grade" I felt came from a few metrics like crime/average household income/etcI also really like realtors dot com new maps, if you search for an address and click on the map and then go to the top left and choose the Value slider it will give you a nice color coded map of which areas of a neighborhood are higher valued.