Anonymous wrote:I was a landlord for about 15 years. It sucked. Sold all the rentals, took the cash I had tied up in those properties and put it in the stock market. Now I have more liquid cash than I can spend. Selling the rentals is the best decision I ever made.
Anonymous wrote:i don’t know about the traveling nurse thing. Sounds like a hassle. I have 2 rental properties both in NoVA and both occupied with long term tenants who never bother me. constant turn over would be expensive and annoying.
Anonymous wrote:I've had success as a landlord for over 20 years.
I do think it's harder now because the prices are higher. I have low mortgages and high rents. I've also been fortunate that I had only one major replacement (roof) that I was able to cover with money saved from the rent.
Anonymous wrote:IMO, yes. Unless you want to (And actually can) do the repairs yourself, and have the time and energy to invest, you can get better returns elsewhere.
House has no heat or a burst pipe, it's on you to fix it and the damages quickly. What if the tenants leave and it takes you 2-3 months to fix it up and find new tenants. You are out the rental income from those months.
I seriously don't know anyone who was happy with becoming a landlord (most chose to rent out their home when purchasing a new one). It's a lot of work and rarely nets you the profits you want/expect