Anonymous wrote:OP - the whole premise of the question seems largely missed by most of the answers. Where’s the ROI from investing in real estate? I’m not insistent on buying a rental but clearly many do including several in my own neighborhood in ffx county. Based on the answers that doesn’t make sense to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best way to evaluate is can I rent the property out and get income that will cover mortgage payments, property insurance, maintenance, vacancy and taxes.
House appreciation is bonus points.
Op - this is my point. At what pricepoint will it be worth the hassle to do this analysis, get the property, rent it out, and deal with maintenance, compared to just sticking the money in the market and not having to do any work? Is there a big ROI?
Anonymous wrote:The rule of thumb is if you can rent it for 1% of the purchase price, it's a good deal. I haven't found anything on the market that meets that requirement. I bought a place a few years ago that breaks even (a little better some years, a little worse when something major breaks) and would have done better in the stock market...and that was with a much lower interest rate than you'll get today. It did ok financially when I had a tenant with a section 8 voucher in there, but the stress of this particular tenant was such that I was glad when they moved, even though the market had softened after that and the next people paid less rent.
Also, are you prepared to do your own maintenance or have you built 8% for property management into your model? Do you understand landlord-tenant law enough to know when you need to hire a lawyer (hint: you almost always should hire a lawyer--I have represented people in landlord-tenant court and I still hired a lawyer for some things)? Are you prepared to evict people when needed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best way to evaluate is can I rent the property out and get income that will cover mortgage payments, property insurance, maintenance, vacancy and taxes.
House appreciation is bonus points.
Op - this is my point. At what pricepoint will it be worth the hassle to do this analysis, get the property, rent it out, and deal with maintenance, compared to just sticking the money in the market and not having to do any work? Is there a big ROI?
It's not the dividends (income) but the price of the real estate increasing, as long as taxes don't eat you up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The best way to evaluate is can I rent the property out and get income that will cover mortgage payments, property insurance, maintenance, vacancy and taxes.
House appreciation is bonus points.
Op - this is my point. At what pricepoint will it be worth the hassle to do this analysis, get the property, rent it out, and deal with maintenance, compared to just sticking the money in the market and not having to do any work? Is there a big ROI?
Anonymous wrote:This is not the time or place to start buying rentals, and don't do it if you need a mortgage.
Anonymous wrote:The best way to evaluate is can I rent the property out and get income that will cover mortgage payments, property insurance, maintenance, vacancy and taxes.
House appreciation is bonus points.