Anonymous wrote:I'd sell since you have no leverage in the investment. It is 100% equity and that's not a great return on equity.
Now if you had a $250K principal balance and a 2.75% interest rate, I'd tell you to keep that rental until its paid off. That's basically free leverage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since you own the property outright, I agree with others that this is not a good candidate for a rental home. Unless you have ties to the house and plan to move back to it at some point in the future.
1) If you sell it and buy the other house, you don't pay capital gains tax on the appreciation gain. This is a big deal.
2) Since you own the property outright, you can't deduct mortgage interest as a cost on your rental income, which you are taxed on.
3) All the people who are saying "just hire a property manager" don't realize that the 8-10% the property manager charges from the rent will further negate any advantage to having a rental house vs. investing in the market.
+1
And hiring a PM doesn't ensure you won't go 1-2 months without a tenant at times. Also doesn't guarantee the tenant wont destroy the home beyond the deposit amount.
Most I know who have rented like this have regretted it. Rarely do you even break even. It's a hassle and you'd be better off with the money in the stock marekt
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since you own the property outright, I agree with others that this is not a good candidate for a rental home. Unless you have ties to the house and plan to move back to it at some point in the future.
1) If you sell it and buy the other house, you don't pay capital gains tax on the appreciation gain. This is a big deal.
2) Since you own the property outright, you can't deduct mortgage interest as a cost on your rental income, which you are taxed on.
3) All the people who are saying "just hire a property manager" don't realize that the 8-10% the property manager charges from the rent will further negate any advantage to having a rental house vs. investing in the market.
+1
And hiring a PM doesn't ensure you won't go 1-2 months without a tenant at times. Also doesn't guarantee the tenant wont destroy the home beyond the deposit amount.
Most I know who have rented like this have regretted it. Rarely do you even break even. It's a hassle and you'd be better off with the money in the stock marekt
Anonymous wrote:Since you own the property outright, I agree with others that this is not a good candidate for a rental home. Unless you have ties to the house and plan to move back to it at some point in the future.
1) If you sell it and buy the other house, you don't pay capital gains tax on the appreciation gain. This is a big deal.
2) Since you own the property outright, you can't deduct mortgage interest as a cost on your rental income, which you are taxed on.
3) All the people who are saying "just hire a property manager" don't realize that the 8-10% the property manager charges from the rent will further negate any advantage to having a rental house vs. investing in the market.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming your question is a financial one...
Assume you net $300k on the sale.
You'll receive $26,400 in rent.
You'll owe $5k in taxes. Assume you'll need to pay $3k in expense per year. And assume you'll have 0% vacancy rate.
You'll net about $18k/year on an asset you could net $300k if sold. That's a 6% cash on cash return under ideal circumstances.
Or you can get a 5%+ return by parking the $300k in short term treasuries -- risk free and no hassle of being a landlord.
Or you can get more than that in other marketable investments.
Sell it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Assuming your question is a financial one...
Assume you net $300k on the sale.
You'll receive $26,400 in rent.
You'll owe $5k in taxes. Assume you'll need to pay $3k in expense per year. And assume you'll have 0% vacancy rate.
You'll net about $18k/year on an asset you could net $300k if sold. That's a 6% cash on cash return under ideal circumstances.
Or you can get a 5%+ return by parking the $300k in short term treasuries -- risk free and no hassle of being a landlord.
Or you can get more than that in other marketable investments.
Sell it.
0% vacancy rate is extremely optimistic. $3K in annual expenses is also a bit low, especially for rentals that take a beating and need frequent painting. Plus some years may be $20K+ if it's time for a roof replacement.
It's rarely a better return to rent rather than sell and invest the money, plus it's a lot more work being a landlord.
Anonymous wrote:One really bad tenant can screw you up for years. And years. Hard to evict plus you lose all the unpaid rent and there's often damage too.
Anonymous wrote:Assuming your question is a financial one...
Assume you net $300k on the sale.
You'll receive $26,400 in rent.
You'll owe $5k in taxes. Assume you'll need to pay $3k in expense per year. And assume you'll have 0% vacancy rate.
You'll net about $18k/year on an asset you could net $300k if sold. That's a 6% cash on cash return under ideal circumstances.
Or you can get a 5%+ return by parking the $300k in short term treasuries -- risk free and no hassle of being a landlord.
Or you can get more than that in other marketable investments.
Sell it.