rather than derail the "who's good with money" thread, I'll start this thread:
alfadriver wrote:Keven wrote:Do your math. The info I see about rental properties- the income is not very high, relative to what is owed. It's great that you can get a property, and earn some money, but unless you do a great job in the property, you are not going to make much of a living just owning rental properties. To have 10-12 units to rent means you start with a LOT of money to get into that game. While you will build equity, many states have 2nd property rules for taxes that make them very, very high on your non-home property.Toyman01 wrote: My current and future investing is going to be in property. Not for the increase in value, but for rental income. I have one rental house now and will add to that as funds become available. The rental generates enough income to pay for itself and then some. I'm in the process of saving and planning for the next one. (This, to me, constitutes a wise use of credit) The master plan is for the rental units to be paid off about the time I'm ready to retire. If I can average $1000/month rent and have 10-12 rentals...you do the math.Feel free to make a rental property thread as I think this will be my next venture.
OK, I did my math.
Keep in mind it's a long-term play, as noted by Toyman01. Goal is to have rentals paid off in time for retirement. It is true that they don't make a lot of money relative to the amount owed at the beginning of the note, but at the beginning of the note we don't care about how much money we're making because we have day jobs.
The plan is not to buy 10-12 rentals today, the plan is to buy them one at a time, as finances allow. The basics are:
It does not take a lot of money to buy the first rental, especially as a DIY'er. Buy a beater house in a rental-friendly neighborhood. Make it nice to live in (a E36 M3 house attracts E36 M3 tenants). Rent has to be competitive for the combination of amenities and area, but will certainly cover PITI plus a little. That "plus a little" goes into an account specifically for that property, to pay for the emergency repairs that are sometimes required, as well as to pay for the routine maintenance stuff that is required, until some target balance is reached. After that, the "plus a little" goes into a separate account for the down payment on rental #2.
if things go south, sell. someone else (the tenant) has been making the PITI all along, so "upside down" shouldn't exist unless things were not managed properly.
One key thing I've heard is to establish an LLC for each property, rather than having all properties covered by the same LLC. Consult an attorney who specializes in landlord / tenant law, property management, etc.