Anonymous wrote:Ours has doubled in value in 5 years! We love it, rent it during peak season and use it ourselves before and after peak season. Plan to stop renting it in an other year. Will spend a lot of time there when retired. It’s been a very good investment and dream come true
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we have one, but we use it one month a year and close it one month a year for a refresh. House has tripled in value and after all expenses we net 42k/yr, which we have invested in the market ins. taxable account.
we are planning on a 1031 exchange in 5 years when our youngest graduates college for a true retirement home that will have no mortgage, allowing us to pocket all the profits from our primary home when we sell.
it’s been an excellent investment.
Except you apparently have been using the property personally for more than 10 percent of the time that it’s been rented, which complicates making a 1031 exchange, and you also cannot move into your “true retirement home” under a 1031 exchange until you’ve rented it out for at least 2 years first. Not as straightforward as you think.
lolol! who is going to tell them i’m using it a month a year?
BTW you only have to demonstrate investment intent. Not exactly difficult. This isn’t my first rodeo.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we have one, but we use it one month a year and close it one month a year for a refresh. House has tripled in value and after all expenses we net 42k/yr, which we have invested in the market ins. taxable account.
we are planning on a 1031 exchange in 5 years when our youngest graduates college for a true retirement home that will have no mortgage, allowing us to pocket all the profits from our primary home when we sell.
it’s been an excellent investment.
Except you apparently have been using the property personally for more than 10 percent of the time that it’s been rented, which complicates making a 1031 exchange, and you also cannot move into your “true retirement home” under a 1031 exchange until you’ve rented it out for at least 2 years first. Not as straightforward as you think.
Anonymous wrote:we have one, but we use it one month a year and close it one month a year for a refresh. House has tripled in value and after all expenses we net 42k/yr, which we have invested in the market ins. taxable account.
we are planning on a 1031 exchange in 5 years when our youngest graduates college for a true retirement home that will have no mortgage, allowing us to pocket all the profits from our primary home when we sell.
it’s been an excellent investment.
Anonymous wrote:There are risks. My dad had a place in Whistler - premium at the time he bought it, but then with global warming it stopped being ski-in ski-out very often, plus they built a lot more upscale places, so the rental return fell quite a bit. In the end he sold barely breaking even. Just be aware that as with every investment the value can ho down as well as up.
Anonymous wrote:You need to research rules related to short term rentals in that area. You also need to hire someone to manage the property and the guest turnover and guest issues. Hosting or being a landlord isn’t for the faint of heart.
Anonymous wrote:For many years spouse and I have daydreamed about purchasing a condo in a popular resort town that we both love.
Purchasing this property would require us to keep it rented via VRBO as much as possible, but we’d spend a couple weeks there each year. We can cash flow what we don’t make in rental income but again, the idea would be to offset that as much as possible.
My question is, if you made the leap and purchased a second home with the idea of renting it out as a necessity when you’re not using it, do you regret it or was it worth the stress/risk? Did it end up being more trouble than it’s worth? Or are you glad you got on the property ladder in your favorite place on earth?
Anonymous wrote:Best advice we ever got was from a woman who lived in the Hawaii condo community we wanted to buy into in the 2000s. She said the HOA dues alone were $1000 a month (then). So that was $12,000 a year we could spend flying and renting a place there or staying in a hotel there.
Getting on the property ladder only makes sense to me if things will appreciate dramatically and paying for it isn't a scramble. You will be competing on price with all the other condos around.
Anonymous wrote:You need to research rules related to short term rentals in that area. You also need to hire someone to manage the property and the guest turnover and guest issues. Hosting or being a landlord isn’t for the faint of heart.