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3 December 2021 | 10 replies
If you want to utilize the equity, rent that property out and hold, refinance
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2 December 2021 | 3 replies
Lessons learned: - Negotiate more based on repairs if they come up on an inspection report, especially if its structured to be paid out of pocket after closing (as this lowers my Cash on cash return significantly)- Minimum cash on cash return I should be going for is 15%, 7% (Cash on cash return)-10% (cash on cash + principal pay-down) is a rate I can easily achieve through boring index funds on the stock market and likely not worth my time and much more of a liquid investment.Challenges:- House had a weird layout that made it a 2 bd/1 ba (utilizing a enclosed sun room as the second bedroom), which gives me some worry about future rents.- Communication between the PM & the existing tenant was not great during the purchase process (had to reschedule the inspection three times), however communication between myself and the PM after closing has been okay.- Scheduling repairs after closing has been tough as a result of the holidays & general lack of labor.Rough estimate of numbers (assuming 5% vacancy, $780/yr in repairs/maintenance, 10% PM fee, $480/yr insurance, $1227/yr property taxes):Current:Expected based on Rental increase to $670 (assuming tenant accepts increase, rental increase would be starting 02/01/2022):Expected if tenant decides to move due to Rent increase (PM company estimates it to be possible to rent at $725-750/mo; keep in mind this doesn't factor in costs to make rent-ready (if any), as well as the cost of getting a new tenant):
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7 January 2022 | 5 replies
Especially unpaid utilities.
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6 December 2021 | 2 replies
It requires a bunch more renovations, and all you really gain is that the property has the two addresses (making each unit conform to occupancy limits, vs the whole home) and you can have separate utilities (which is pricey to do, and you can submeter if you really want to anyway).
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2 January 2022 | 20 replies
Utilize the benefit of a conventional owner occupied home loan, and place the lowest down payment available to you without PMI.
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4 February 2022 | 19 replies
Address who takes care of in your lease.5) Trash- unless condo etc, most trash is included in their water bill, which is part of their utilities they should be paying directly.
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2 January 2022 | 11 replies
I am a rookie and learned how the appraisal contingency can be utilized strategically and that you're not absolutely locked in to your offer price Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?
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10 December 2021 | 2 replies
What is the process like from locating the land. laying the utilities, and keeping the park nice?
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4 December 2021 | 6 replies
In our SFR tenants pay all utilities.
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13 December 2021 | 18 replies
Also, I have no cleaning or utilities during the time a tenant lives in the property.