Anonymous wrote:OP: Annual rental income net $70k after overheads, carrying costs and tax. Upcoming upkeep and repairs estimated to cost $60k. If I sell it, would net around $1.7m.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sell. You probably had no business buying it in first place.
1.7 million would give you $100k easily a year with little to no work. Also, figure out how to lower your taxes going forward.
My rental with equity of about 500k and no mortgage generates around 35k/year. Hardly any risk (1 mile from metro) and provides a hedge against inflation and doesn’t fluctuate based on whatever Trump tweeted last night. Three of those at a cost of 150k easily beats your 100k/year off of 1.7. And I can live in it if I lose everything and become homeless.
Anonymous wrote:Sell. You probably had no business buying it in first place.
1.7 million would give you $100k easily a year with little to no work. Also, figure out how to lower your taxes going forward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a rental home in a highly desirable neighborhood, earning high rent ($10k+). It is starting to look dated and a list of home improvement needs are coming up. Tenant 's lease is up soon and won't be renewing (returning to home country). Should we sell it and use proceeds to invest in stocks, etc.? Or is it better to have hard assets in these unpredictable times and find another tenants?
“unpredictable times”?!?
Really? Is anything predictable? It certainly wasn’t under Biden and Obama.
Anonymous wrote:We have a rental home in a highly desirable neighborhood, earning high rent ($10k+). It is starting to look dated and a list of home improvement needs are coming up. Tenant 's lease is up soon and won't be renewing (returning to home country). Should we sell it and use proceeds to invest in stocks, etc.? Or is it better to have hard assets in these unpredictable times and find another tenants?