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3 October 2016 | 4 replies
Postage is expensive. :) Good luck!
5 October 2016 | 20 replies
I'll make a list of expenses I think I will encounter.Purchase - 65000Rent- 650Taxes monthly - 105Insurance monthly- 62Vacancy 5% - 32Repair 5% - 32Mortgage - 278All that puts me at 509 expenses versus 650 rent to be at 141 cash flow monthly.I have calculated the CoCR a couple different ways because I am certain that the house is rent ready now but I also figured it with some rehab expenses just in case I find something.141x12= 16921692/16000(down payment plus closing)= 10.5% CoCR1692/18000(down payment, closing, and 2k rehab) = 9.4%Like I said before 650 seems like the safe route for potential rent.
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30 September 2016 | 36 replies
It's good risk management to have the 30-year mortgage and the flexibility in case your rents ever go down, or you have a really large capital expense (e.g. you have to replace an entire HVAC system).Lastly, seek out a portfolio lender (a.k.a. balance sheet lender).
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7 October 2016 | 9 replies
The bank/lender will ask for all the financials on the property, check the income verse expenses, and many different aspects regarding the building a the project income and the historical treads in the area of the deal.You will not have to provide pay stubs, credit checks, employment checks, debt ratios, or anything the banks do while looking at a SFR deal.
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4 October 2016 | 9 replies
Most think of that classification as upper-middle class, median price range and above for both home and income of the resident.
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29 September 2016 | 11 replies
On-site or part-time, someone has to do it and get paid while doing it. 5% PM fee is pretty standard for large properties (100+ units) and, yes, 30-units may end up with 8% PM fee and no "official" payroll but the expense is there in some form nevertheless.
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6 October 2016 | 8 replies
Crunch those numbers after analyzing all expenses and what you can get from rent to make sure that you will be cash flowing no matter what or at least breaking even.
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28 September 2016 | 4 replies
5 years in the rental business is close to zero years for analysing a properties expenses.
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19 December 2016 | 8 replies
Good writeup @John Mathewson@Zachary Foust I usually don't recommend becoming an agent first because of the time and expense, and because people usually use it an excuse not to start investing.
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3 October 2016 | 5 replies
It is a 8 unit with the 2 lower front apartments are the garage..As far as income for the building to cover expenses..