One of the surest pathways to wealth through real estate has always
been the acquisition of cash flowing rental properties. However, as
with any business, for every successful, happy landlord there are eight
or nine others who are either struggling, sitting on the sidelines, or
completely washed out. Despite this fact, the principles and practices
involved in running such a business successfully are quite
straightforward and easy enough to follow with just a little bit of
quality advice and common sense.
Let's examine where you can go right and where you can go wrong in acquiring rental properties.
There are at least three primary advantages of rental properties sought
by portfolio investors. The main one is passive cash flow; once
acquired, rental properties generate income without the landlord
actively working. In addition the owner typically enjoys gains from
appreciation as well, as property values tend to rise over time.
And finally, the tax advantages of owning rental properties can be
substantial, the primary one being claimed depreciation. Although most
properties go up in value year by year, the IRS allows property owners
to deduct depreciation losses from their reported income as if the
property were actually declining in value. Consult your CPA or tax
professional for specifics on this subject.
So how do aspiring landlords go wrong? Generally in one of four ways.
The primary sin is paying too much for the property. To operate at a
profit you must pay wholesale, not retail. Generally speaking, retail
price is what the seller wants you to pay.
Wholesale price is the price at which you can buy the property so that
it will cash flow at an acceptable cap rate after accounting for all
expenses: mortgage payments (including principal, interest, taxes,
insurance), maintenance, management, vacancy, and any deferred
maintenance.
Buying wholesale means buying at a price where the property will cash
flow today, not after improvements are made or rent is increased. The
second pitfall is buying a property that is unrentable or located in a
neighborhood with a soft rental market. The ideal solution is to buy
properties that are already tenant occupied, but if you do buy a vacant
property make sure there is plenty of rental demand in the neighborhood
or better yet locate several potential tenants before you buy.
The third roadblock comes from using conventional financing and
reaching your lender's loan limit. After you have a certain number of
rental properties your lender will cut you off and not loan you money
to buy more. The best solution for this is to avoid using conventional
financing and acquire properties by alternative financing methods, such
as subject to, seller financing, or private financing whenever
possible.
The final hurdle to overcome is landlord burnout, which is what happens
when green landlords try to manage all of their properties themselves.
If you want to be a business person and not a hobbyist, plan to use
professional property management services, and figured them in to your
costs when you buy.
Omar Johnson is a successful real estate investor and author of the home study course "Secrets To Making Big Money In Real Estate With Little Cash and No Credit" For more info visit www.gettingrichinrealestate.com
Article Source: DesireToRetire.com





