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own rental property


 

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How to own rental property



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Adam Reid is trying to get my debt in order

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6 months
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happy for my future


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my retirement 1 month ago

My goal for retirement is to own 5 pieces of rental property. I plan on purchasing my first property in 1 year; when I have my RN degree. I will continue to purchase property and use the revenue from rent to pay for the propery and use a minimal amount from my personal assests. At the time of retirement I can sell the investments and have enough money not only to retire but enough to travel extensively.



Ryanandtheseideals ersity application and leave City College!!!

I'd like to have my own rental property before I hit my 30s 11 months ago

Got to plan for this one HARD!!!

It will be a blessing once I have a good source of passive income such as this one. I can’t work forever you know! I got lots of other things I want to do. That’s why I need to create an investment plan for the money I’ll make from work once I’m done with Graduate school.



Adam Reid is trying to get my debt in order

Untitled 18 months ago

part my long term goal to build my own little empire and retire early



Maybe next year... 1 year ago

After the housing market stabalizes and my own income stabilizes.



mahinui ever more at home

this was not something I "wanted" to do 2 years ago

Circumstances made it a better choice than selling a house in a down market, originally.

The risks are there, and the rewards can be enormous.

There is the easy way and the hard way. The easy way is to pay a property manager lots of the take, and let them do most of the work. A good manager and a great vacation rental makes for “good cash flow”. It takes research, and investment, and you have to be willing to admit that the manager earns the money they make, or it will drive you nuts.

I personally would not set out to buy rental property just for the sake of doing that. I would want to be very clear on my goal. Is this a house I will move into eventually? Is this a place I am buying for the re-sale? Understand the IRS rules, and be prepared for market ups and downs.

A good rental is a year round rental, where you break even, if you have a mortgage. Breaking even means after you’ve paid the mortgage and the upkeep, and gotten your tax credits, and paid for your trips to do maintenance, you are even.

Some people want positive cash flow. That’s a nice idea, and in some parts of the world it can work. That tends to mean a lot of money into the initial investment.

It also helps if you are good at letting go. If not, owning a rental property will teach you to do that. Or you will go nuts.

My experience with long term renters was mixed. I worried about not finding renters – it was easy. I worried they would not pay their rent – they always did. I did not worry they would damage the place – they did. But it worked out much better than selling in a down market.

As for vacation renters, the experience as to the people is better. They are respectful of the place they stay, and fall somewhere on the spectrum of being picky and critical to being deeply appreciative, with the majority loving the place and vowing to return. Repeat business does happen, but most of the business for me has been original first timers.

Finally, vacationers fall into economic & emotional classes. People who want to pay too little are not as appreciative or respectful as those who expect to pay what a place is worth. By too little, I mean those who ask for deep discounts, like half off. The worst vacationers I’ve had are those who want to know about every detail up front. Tons of questions tends to mean they are OCD and the place will never be up to their expectations once they get there.

The real up side? You trade a place you can’t live anymore for a place you long to go to, and let the vacationers pay for it when you’re not there. And someday, if you plan well, you get to move there and let go of your working life, because the place will have been paid for!



This will be on the list a while 2 years ago

Well, I’ve paid off the cc debt, the car is mine and I’m working on the savings. But, the savings part will probably take a while so this goal will be on the list for while.



Untitled 3 years ago

If you’re in the right position to do this, it can be well worth it. However, my experience was that I was barely able to make up the mortgage with the rent money, and then I had an awful tenant who didn’t pay on time and destroyed the carpet, the furniture, and stole a mattress. I didn’t buy the house to rent, I bought it to live in, but then I moved across the country. I had someone managing it, but absentee landlordism is not what it’s cracked up to be.



A Plan for the future 3 years ago

After I am credit card debt free and my car is paid for. I want to increase my savings. Then, I want to purchase a house, that I can rent and uses as additional income. There’s lots of information available to read about rental property, so I should not have a problem finding information. I just have to wait until I am financially ready to make a purchase.



What a hassle! 3 years ago

My tenant set fire to my house, and when she moved out, she took the refrigerator! Not worth the red tape and worry.




 

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