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1 September 2016 | 12 replies
My parents want to get a house closer to town. so my thought was, could I potentially just purchase a multifamily house in Lafayette Indiana using a low down payment financing, since I would plan on being there for a while myself, then rent the other side to them (under market value and less than the crazy high mortgage they pay now, but still high enough to fill an emergency fund into the house) I would be using my own low living expenses to build up capital for my next investment property.
5 September 2016 | 17 replies
You buy it and fix up the renter's side first, and let's say you manage to rent it for $1000/monthly, but $750 of that goes to expenses - mortgage, loans to fix it, insurance, etc - so you have $250/month to go along with your $20k/annual, so by year 3 you have enough to buy a second unit.
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1 September 2016 | 9 replies
My favorite is using the Intuit Self Employed App because it automatically tracks miles as part of the monthly price and updates your expense tracking.
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1 September 2016 | 7 replies
Both offices had a good handful of bodies at the locations along with a few appeared to be customers onsite, but i'm a little worried about all the fees and monthly expenses i was presented with along with the commision rates.
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4 September 2016 | 7 replies
My question is, are those good enough margins after you calculate additional expenses?
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1 September 2016 | 2 replies
Expenses (in addition to P&I, insurance and taxes) being 3% vacancy, 5% repairs, 10% cap ex, 7% property management.
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1 September 2016 | 3 replies
The first thing that comes to my mind is to reduce expenses and bring the P+I down as much as possible to reduce overhead and provide a cashflow buffer.
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1 September 2016 | 3 replies
@Charles S.The 50 % Rule States: That 50% of gross scheduled income (GSI) goes out over time to cover expenses not including debt coverage.The 1%, 2% and the 50% rule is meant to act as a quick analysis tool, to insure the deal is actually deal.
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2 September 2016 | 8 replies
Great area - here are my numbers: Monthly Annual Purchase Price 168,500 Monthly Rent 2200 Cash to Close (20% + $4k close costs) 33,700 Annual Rent 26400 Property Tax $375 $4,500 Insurance 100 1200 Mortgage 835 10020 Vacancy (5%) 110 1320 Repairs (5%) 110 1320 Total Expenses $1,530 $18,360 Net Income $670 $8,040 Net Income without Mortgage $1,505 $18,060 Cap Rate 5% Cash on Cash 24%
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1 September 2016 | 0 replies
After some half-assed, yet still expensive repairs, I got a home warranty.