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I would advise against owning homes just for rental purposes...
You can flourish with that money in ETFs and REITs
You can flourish with that money in ETFs and REITs
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I'm looking to do a small place no more than 1000 square feet. Small bachelor pad. Pops friend builds these small homes in 90 days.
Heres one I really like. It's only 400 sqft but as a Navy veteran I'm used to storing my worldly possessions in a space the size of a coffin.
Dope thats probably a mansion for what you are used too. Thanks for your service
I would advise against owning homes just for rental purposes...
You can flourish with that money in ETFs and REITs
well, homes are a consumption good...Can you please elaborate?
Firsthand experience.Can you please elaborate?
Yes, rentbacks are pretty common. That should have been agreed upon when the initial offer was agreed upon. It shouldn't be too difficult for your Realtors to draft up a rentback agreement after closing though. Honestly, 5 days is nothing. If anything, you can get 5 days of your first month's mortgage paid for by them.Buying a home now for cash and seller wants to stay in possession for five days after closing so he can use the money from it to move. I told him not a chance. Supposedly this is not wildly uncommon, as you can draft up post-closing possession agreements, work with insurance providers, etc. but I'm not with it. Now it's becoming such a big deal that I might lose the house and it's not easily replaceable.
Thoughts?
You have rentals in L.A.?? RIPFirsthand experience.Can you please elaborate?
I have a house that rents to college kids and breaks down as $3200($800 a room, max 2, so $400 split if they choose) -2k mortgage (includes equity payment for remodeling) so I make $1200 a month off that property.
I have an owner occupied duplex that rents for $1500-$1100 mortgage so I make $400.
$1600 a month. This last month though? 2k in repairs (plumbing/landscaping issues)
I dont pay a mortgage, but man, there are days where I want to break down and cry.
My tenants are ok, timely payments, no complaints, but these old *** houses in L.A. are money pits.
Add to that, I'm always trying to improve my tenants experience so I don't go unrented, and sometimes I put too much on myself cause I'm hands on and don't want to be a slum lord who only cares about the money.
I can easily contract to Section 8, and not fix anything, and just get people in for that guaranteed check but I take pride in my homes and screen the hell out of tenants.
It's a headache that sometimes got me searching TX, ATL, SC on zillow
You have rentals in L.A.?? RIP
You better pray you don't have to go through the eviction process on one of those. It's HELL trying to get a tenant out there. If they have kids or a disability? Cash for Keys will cost you almost $19,000 by city ordinance!
You have rentals in L.A.?? RIP
You better pray you don't have to go through the eviction process on one of those. It's HELL trying to get a tenant out there. If they have kids or a disability? Cash for Keys will cost you almost $19,000 by city ordinance!
I know. A big part of why I just want to let it be and cash out for a 300k-400k property here or 100-200k elsewhere and make the profit work for me the same way.
Luckily usc been good to me and the students are mostly international grad kids . Been lucky but tenants have you by the balls in l.a.
Firsthand experience.Can you please elaborate?
I have a house that rents to college kids and breaks down as $3200($800 a room, max 2, so $400 split if they choose) -2k mortgage (includes equity payment for remodeling) so I make $1200 a month off that property.
I have an owner occupied duplex that rents for $1500-$1100 mortgage so I make $400.
$1600 a month. This last month though? 2k in repairs (plumbing/landscaping issues)
I dont pay a mortgage, but man, there are days where I want to break down and cry.
My tenants are ok, timely payments, no complaints, but these old *** houses in L.A. are money pits.
Add to that, I'm always trying to improve my tenants experience so I don't go unrented, and sometimes I put too much on myself cause I'm hands on and don't want to be a slum lord who only cares about the money.
I can easily contract to Section 8, and not fix anything, and just get people in for that guaranteed check but I take pride in my homes and screen the hell out of tenants.
It's a headache that sometimes got me searching TX, ATL, SC on zillow
You have rentals in L.A.?? RIP
You better pray you don't have to go through the eviction process on one of those. It's HELL trying to get a tenant out there. If they have kids or a disability? Cash for Keys will cost you almost $19,000 by city ordinance!
Pay the $9000 or $18,000 to get them out? Honestly though, I would consult with a Real Estate attorney on that one. L.A. is a dicey place to perform an eviction. The only place worse in the state is Oakland from my experience.la is a good place to make money investing in houses of your real sharp. about a year ago my dad was showig me some condos that got flipped in a couple months for like 2-3 hunna thousandYou have rentals in L.A.?? RIPFirsthand experience.Can you please elaborate?
I have a house that rents to college kids and breaks down as $3200($800 a room, max 2, so $400 split if they choose) -2k mortgage (includes equity payment for remodeling) so I make $1200 a month off that property.
I have an owner occupied duplex that rents for $1500-$1100 mortgage so I make $400.
$1600 a month. This last month though? 2k in repairs (plumbing/landscaping issues)
I dont pay a mortgage, but man, there are days where I want to break down and cry.
My tenants are ok, timely payments, no complaints, but these old *** houses in L.A. are money pits.
Add to that, I'm always trying to improve my tenants experience so I don't go unrented, and sometimes I put too much on myself cause I'm hands on and don't want to be a slum lord who only cares about the money.
I can easily contract to Section 8, and not fix anything, and just get people in for that guaranteed check but I take pride in my homes and screen the hell out of tenants.
It's a headache that sometimes got me searching TX, ATL, SC on zillow
You better pray you don't have to go through the eviction process on one of those. It's HELL trying to get a tenant out there. If they have kids or a disability? Cash for Keys will cost you almost $19,000 by city ordinance!
anyways my dad is trying to evict a bad tenant and he's in Los Angeles. any tips? @crcballer55
Not necessarily, but it takes so long, that it's often worth it for the landlord to give the tenant $9000 (or $18000 if there's a child, elderly, or disabled person living there). Keep in mind, $9000 is often 4 months of rent, and the eviction process in California can easily take up to a year to complete, and that's if there's no litigation brought forward by the tenant.Wait what?
You get $9k to get evicted?
Wait what?
You get $9k to get evicted?
Not necessarily, but it takes so long, that it's often worth it for the landlord to give the tenant $9000 (or $18000 if there's a child, elderly, or disabled person living there). Keep in mind, $9000 is often 4 months of rent, and the eviction process in California can easily take up to a year to complete, and that's if there's no litigation brought forward by the tenant.
dad's doing it.My pops has properties in Cali mostly the ventura county and thousand Oaks area. He rents to military officers. No problems to be had, gives a discount to lower ranking guys that are in construction and they tend to the problems of the other properties. His deposits equal one months rent and 1st and last so you need damn near 6k just move in but he gets quality tenants. He puts their deposits in interest earning accounts and they stay there till they move and they get that and the interest earned back. He pays cash so there is no mortgage he lives off off the cali rents and stacks his 400k salary from his business. He just renovated 5 brownstones in Brooklyn and has 20 properties in Houston. He pays cash for everthing.
dad's doing it.My pops has properties in Cali mostly the ventura county and thousand Oaks area. He rents to military officers. No problems to be had, gives a discount to lower ranking guys that are in construction and they tend to the problems of the other properties. His deposits equal one months rent and 1st and last so you need damn near 6k just move in but he gets quality tenants. He puts their deposits in interest earning accounts and they stay there till they move and they get that and the interest earned back. He pays cash so there is no mortgage he lives off off the cali rents and stacks his 400k salary from his business. He just renovated 5 brownstones in Brooklyn and has 20 properties in Houston. He pays cash for everthing.
Sounds like he got in relatively early in the game though...
Some pics of the home I am considering. 7 bed 6.5 bath
I can get a 3.99% fixed doctors loan which is very tempting vs waiting and saving up the 20% down
Nice home.Yea will be putting something down somwhere around 5-10%. Cant do a 100% loan because the mortgage would be over 650k. I will probably just wait and build up the full 20%.
If that's the case and with the mortgage amount being so high it would be better to just save up until you have the 20%. Have you already been in contact with a loan officer?
Firsthand experience.
I have a house that rents to college kids and breaks down as $3200($800 a room, max 2, so $400 split if they choose) -2k mortgage (includes equity payment for remodeling) so I make $1200 a month off that property.
I have an owner occupied duplex that rents for $1500-$1100 mortgage so I make $400.
$1600 a month. This last month though? 2k in repairs (plumbing/landscaping issues)
I dont pay a mortgage, but man, there are days where I want to break down and cry.
My tenants are ok, timely payments, no complaints, but these old *** houses in L.A. are money pits.
Add to that, I'm always trying to improve my tenants experience so I don't go unrented, and sometimes I put too much on myself cause I'm hands on and don't want to be a slum lord who only cares about the money.
I can easily contract to Section 8, and not fix anything, and just get people in for that guaranteed check but I take pride in my homes and screen the hell out of tenants.
It's a headache that sometimes got me searching TX, ATL, SC on zillow
I'm looking to do a small place no more than 1000 square feet. Small bachelor pad. Pops friend builds these small homes in 90 days.
Heres one I really like. It's only 400 sqft but as a Navy veteran I'm used to storing my worldly possessions in a space the size of a coffin.
Buying a home now for cash and seller wants to stay in possession for five days after closing so he can use the money from it to move. I told him not a chance. Supposedly this is not wildly uncommon, as you can draft up post-closing possession agreements, work with insurance providers, etc. but I'm not with it. Now it's becoming such a big deal that I might lose the house and it's not easily replaceable.
Thoughts?
Yes, rentbacks are pretty common. That should have been agreed upon when the initial offer was agreed upon. It shouldn't be too difficult for your Realtors to draft up a rentback agreement after closing though. Honestly, 5 days is nothing. If anything, you can get 5 days of your first month's mortgage paid for by them.
We went through the same thing earlier this year. We closed on the sale of our home and stayed there until our other home closed a week later. There were tenants in the new home too, so we were able to collect from them while paying the new owner of our old home. As long as the transaction hasn't gone sideways over something stupid, you should be pretty safe since the seller has already had a vested interest in their home. It's not like a typical tenant that doesn't care about the property.