BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 192: I Make Great Money - Why Do I Feel So Broke? Finance Friday
Episode Date: April 30, 2021In many of our lives, we make a decent salary, we try to save and invest, but we still feel bogged down by debt. How is it possible to feel “broke” while making a great salary? That is the questio...n that Tiara, today’s guest, is asking. Tiara works as a park ranger in Texas, but wants to take a break in the next few years to go on a big travelling holiday. This is a great idea! She’s worked very hard, managed to get some assets under her name, and needs a break. But before she can go out and explore the world, she needs to take care of some high-interest credit card debt eating away at her bank account and her financial sanity. Tiara is also sitting on a rental property that has appreciated since she bought it. This rental property used to be her primary residence, so she still has some emotional ties to it, but with her current needs growing greater than her need to hang on to a negative cash-flowing rental, it may be time to sell the house. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast, show number 192, Finance Friday edition, where we interview
Tierra and talk about selling off underperforming assets to pay off high interest debt and
proper capital allocation so that she can live long and prosper.
You saying that, as I stutter over this, kind of puts things into perspective, because this was
a pie in the sky years from now. I don't even know what reality will look like possibility, right?
my gap year. But if the house is what's holding me back.
Oh, hello, hello. My name is Mindy Jensen. And with me as always is my Spock-like co-host, Scott Trench.
I see that you still cling on to these nerdy intras, Mindy.
Scott and I are here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else.
To introduce you to every money story, because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable
for everyone no matter when or where you're starting.
That's right. Whether you want to retire early and travel the world, going to make
Big time investments in assets like real estate, start your own business or simply fund a gap year
to have a couple of adventures. We'll help you reach your financial goals and get money out of the way
so that you can launch yourself towards your dreams. Scott, I am so excited to have Tiara on the show
today. She is facing what she feels is a financial crisis where she doesn't really feel like
she has enough money saved for retirement. She's also got some high interest credit card debt
and some student loans.
And she's wondering, if I make so much money, how come I feel broke all the time?
And I think that your advice to her today for reconsidering her capital allocation is really,
really great.
I think a lot of people kind of just continue doing what they've always done.
And you brought up the...
Well, yeah, I don't know.
Well, I'll just chime in here.
Tiara had two problems, I think, that were really fundamentally hurting her.
financial position. One is that she was not budgeting for large, irregular, several thousand
dollar expenses. There's a health care procedure. There's new car, all that kind of stuff.
That has to be something you include in your monthly budget, you know, and we'll talk about that.
That's called budgeting for CAPEX if you're a real estate investor, and it's the same concept
applied to your personal life where you have every couple of years you're going to have a big,
large, one-time expense if you're living in normal human life in America. And so you need to be able to
plan those things, and if you don't, it might look like in many months you're saving 500,
a thousand bucks, but you're really saving much less than that because some of that has to go
to these large one-time payments. And the second problem that she was having is what we call
capital allocation problems, where she's got a number of debts, a number of retirement accounts,
a number of high interest debts like credit card debts, and significant assets and retirement
vehicles and those types of things, and an underperforming rental property.
And by selling some assets, stopping contributing in other places, paying off debts according to a specific approach, she can achieve a lot more freedom right away and in an ongoing basis in the future.
And so I think there's a lot of, a lot of great lessons to be learned from Tiara's story today.
And I think you're going to learn a ton here.
One quick caveat.
One of Tiara's goals is to fund a gap year in a few years.
and so our advice is tailored towards that goal.
We are not necessarily saying that it's a good idea to save up a lot of money or sell off
some assets and put that into a fund for a gap year rather than investing for the long
term or anything.
But that was her goal and that's what we're helping her achieve around that.
Well, also, I think appropriately caveating that, like, hey, it's also good to sustain
a pattern of investing for the long run.
So I hope you enjoyed today's show.
There's a lot to learn here.
A lot of cool stuff going on that I think really is great examples of investment and wealth building
principles that you can see applied in practice in her position and how with some tweaks
she can achieve a lot more freedom relatively quickly.
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Today we're talking to Tiara.
Tiara is getting a slightly later start on her journey to financial independence and has
some debt she needs to take care of.
She's saving up for a gap year and is looking for tips for growing her investments.
She has a rental property, but she isn't sure if it's a great investment.
So we'll dive into those numbers and see what we think.
Tiarra, welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
Howdy?
Howdy? How old doing today.
Oh, I love a good howdy and a good y'all.
This is going to be such a great episode.
So let's dive right in.
First of all, what part of the world do you live in and what do you do for a living?
I'm here in northern Dallas, Texas.
I'm a park ranger.
A park ranger?
Oh, my God.
That sounds like an awesome job.
Is that an awesome job?
It's amazing.
I love it so much.
Oh, I'm jealous.
I want to do your job. Let's have a job swap for the day.
Okay, so Dallas, Texas and a park ranger. Let's set up your balance sheet. Let's look at your income and where that money's going.
Well, yeah, sorry, let's create that income statement and say, hey, where's, like, how much do you bring in from your salary?
And I think you mentioned you have a second job. Like, how much income are you bringing in a monthly basis?
Got you. So for my primary job, I bring in 4070 for my second job. For my second job.
job I brought in last year about another extra thousand and I'm trying to back off that second
job now that I got some debt squared away. So about a little under $5,000 a month. Okay, awesome.
And can you tell us a little bit about how far that goes? How much are you able to save on a
monthly basis? And where are your expenses? What are kind of your big expenses?
That my biggest expense is going to be rent. It's about $1,800 a month. That little under
or five grand a month goes pretty far. I save about $1,000, maybe $1,200 a month.
Okay, awesome. So can you walk us through kind of maybe like, if you're, you're saying
you're bringing in about $5,000, it's at $4070 plus a few hundred bucks a month in the second
job, which man, where's the $3,000 to $4,000 in total expense going?
Got you. Okay. So rent for one about $1,300 of the month, groceries. I do another $300 a month,
transportation gas for me is like 40 bucks a month. And then I have some insurance. Insurance for me is
about $108 a month. I have some debt I'm still paying off to the tune of about $50 a month. And then I'm
paying the minimums my credit cards and then student loans have been deferred. Okay. So I'm hearing
$1,300 per month and then about $700 or $800 and other major expenses.
which is to 2000.
But you said you're spending about closer to 3 or 4,000 a month.
I spend definitely $3,000 a month.
That's much I average.
Okay, great.
And how long have you been tracking or keeping a budget?
This will be my second year using YNAP.
Second year using YNAP?
Okay, so you feel like you feel like you feel like you feel like there's like any
like some room or something question marks in your budget that you want, that you'd want
help with today that we should kind of file away?
Or do you feel like you're pretty pretty, pretty common?
about how much you're spending on a monthly basis and the command of your money.
I'm pretty comfy with it.
It's just a discipline issue, right?
I got really into plants.
The next thing you know, an Albo monster cost a grand.
That's awesome.
I've not heard of a plant spending issue there.
So I'm, I'm, there's a pun here that I'll come to me in a few minutes.
But, oh, well.
Unbelievable.
Oh, yeah, there you go.
Oh, my God.
Are there two of you on this show today?
We'll identify a root cause here.
All right.
Oh, no.
Let's talk about your debts here.
Can you walk us through debts and assets?
Most definitely.
So I have a 457 loan that's active right now.
That's about $157 a month.
I have another year and a half to pay for it, and the balance is about 1,800 left.
And then I have three student loans.
The only one that's not currently deferred is about $50 a month.
The balance I have remaining there is $2,400.
And the other two groups of loans total out to be about $35,000.
Okay.
So you have $35,000 in student loans, but a lot of those are in forbearance through September.
Okay.
Any other debts?
My partner and I share three credit cards, and the total on those credit cards is about $4,000, or $4,500.
Okay.
And is that past due, or is that kind of like just your monthly balance that you carry and you pay it off usually?
Or a monthly balance that we carry, but we don't pay it off.
We just pay the minimums right now.
Okay.
All right.
And do you have any...
Hold on that, Scott.
What interest rates are we talking about on these credit cards?
In the 20s.
In the 20%?
Yes, ma'am.
Okay.
I can see my first order of recommendation.
Well, let's keep going here.
What other debts do we have?
Oh, I have a mortgage in a different city.
And now that property is being rented out and that mortgage has $100,000 left on it.
So, and that's at four and a quarter, I believe.
Okay, great.
So you've got a rental property and any other debts.
No, that's it. That's everything.
All right. Let's go to assets.
So we know we have a rental property.
Do you walk us through kind of any cash you have on hand, investments, real estate, those kinds of things?
Most definitely. So that rental property in San Antonio rents were about 14, 15, and cash wells after property management and expenses and stuff about $100.
And then from there, I have a retirement account.
That's kind of like a pension because I'm a park ranger.
That's about $13,000.
and then my deferred or $457 deferred compensation plan is at about $28,000.
And I have a couple of investment accounts.
And that is at $3,000.
The other one is at $2,500.
My basic savings account is $5,000.
And then I have a 401k and a Roth 401k with my second job, and that's about $4,000.
All right, you said, yeah, I was just slowing down here.
So we got cash at $5,000 and then the 401k balance is what?
The 401k balance for my second job is $4,000.
And what is that second job?
I'll work at a grocery store.
Okay.
Do they have any sort of pension plan or any other, like, profit sharing or anything like that?
No.
Okay.
But the 401K, that's still really awesome that you have one.
Well, great.
This is a lot to work with here.
You've got a lot of things going on here.
And my first question,
before we get into kind of some of the details around this is how comfortable do you feel around
the world of personal finance and all of that kind of stuff? Like, have you spent a lot of time
thinking about this? Is a lot of the concepts new? Do you have like a plan in mind?
Or what's kind of your framework for approaching things? On a scale of one to ten, my comfort is about
an eight. I feel like I understand the basics. It's just that willpower and discipline piece, right?
Like, I'm going to buy that monster and I'm not going to feel bad about it, but it is a thousand
I listen to podcasts like these daily.
I look at my budget daily.
I kind of I save and plan for different expenses,
and I make sure to, you know,
take into account what the numbers are before I go out
and buy expensive plans.
On your application, you said,
we make a great living.
Why do I feel so broke?
And I think that there are a lot of people
who are listening right now who have that exact same thought in their mind. Why am I feeling so broke?
I make such a great salary. What's the problem? So I want to know if you track your spending actively,
or do you do it after the month's over? No, actively. So every day I'll go through before I go ahead and make a
purchase because like, you know, why not have has your buckets you can spend out of? And so I'll look at that bucket
and take the money out and then go ahead and swipe my card and pay for the purchase, right?
And so I look at that every day. I record what I spend every day. It's just I've been spending a lot of
time saving. Like last year, I saved $20,000 and I only made $52. I'm really proud of myself for that.
And I'm kind of feeling a crunch in that. And I'm feeling regretful because I think my account
balances from my retirement accounts are great. However, the liquid cash I have, that's not enough.
And that feels really weird to me.
So that's why I mean like when I feel broke, we make all this money and I'm doing a
saving piece, but why is it my savings account kind of matching up with how, you know,
how much money I'm putting away?
Yeah, I think for me, like, in my sense the situation is I think that there is some
nuance to your budget and to make, you know, if there's 20,000, I still don't fully understand
what's going on if, because what you told us earlier sounds like you're saving like a thousand
a month, which is still good, but 20,000 is a lot of savings.
But I think that a bigger issue here might be capital allocation where what you're investing
in and how you're choosing to pay off or not pay off debts is creating a situation that's very
stressful for you that could be probably cleaned up within a year.
And I'll definitely want to touch it on that in a second here.
Because you have assets.
You're just clearly building wealth.
But at the same time, you've got all of these tic-tack debts that are pinging against
your cash flow on a regular basis and accumulating unreasonable.
interest in some cases. So I got you. Okay, let me back up a little bit there. I'm sorry. So last year,
that 20 grand came through a combination of putting away a grand a month in that 457, deferring some
additional money in my HSA. It came from some contributions to a pension fund that I'm not in
control about 7%. And it came from like little tiki tax contributions to my betterment account
in my ally account like $35 a week, that kind of thing, and just grew over time. And then,
you know, the market's been okay if you kept investing through March. And like, like little
things like that. There are some investments I'm actively investing in, then other things
are out of my control and all that comes together to build up that 20K. Okay. So a lot of that's
going into tax deferred plans like the like the retirement accounts and the 457. Yep. Okay, great.
And that's, that almost sounds like a 60, 70, 80 percent of what you saved went into those areas.
Is that right? That is correct.
Okay, great. And then another question here before we get into some of the other stuff. What is your goal?
I thought really hard about this over the weekend. I can't pin down a long-term goal, but my midterm call is definitely in 2020, I want to take a mini retirement. I want to take a couple years off from work, kind of get my head straight and take a break. I've been grinding since I was seven years old and I'm tired.
My short term. Yes, ma'am. When you get in school, get them grades. You got to get scholarships. Let's go and do this.
A's, A's, A's, A's.
Good for you.
But yeah, I can totally understand the gap year.
What does your gap year look like and what does employment look like?
Can you take time off and come back to your employment?
Or would you be switching careers?
Both those options are possible.
So my gap year, well, it would, ideally in my head, from 2023 to 2025, I'd be able to take a break and travel.
I would explore some passions.
I want to learn how to renovate a house.
to my own bare hands. I want to write a book. I want to go travel. Long term, I would like to
retire overseas in Portugal, but it would be a good idea to go over there first. And so that's
the plan, too. And then coming back off of that, I'm at a point in my career where I'm at
mid-level management. And so I can probably turn the skills I learned in that gap year into,
like a director's level position coming back, or I can get a chance to pivot completely
and explore a career in a different field. I love libraries, and I love the post office. So I might
explore things in there. All right. I love it. And I think that that gives us something very
clear to plan around here. Can I ask how old you are? I'm 34. 34. Okay. So let's start with
capital allocation here. Actually, before you start with capital allocation, I'm going to jump in here and say,
you're not getting a late start.
34 is only a late start compared to all these 20-year-olds who are retired early because they were
100% percent.
Yeah, 100% agree.
And made $150,000 a year while they lived in their mom's basement in Iowa.
And if that's you, I'm not picking fun at you.
I'm just saying that Tiara is not starting late.
She is starting well within the normal American time frame and actually probably pretty early
in the normal American time frame.
Also, we lost over the fact that you saved $20,000.
Hooray, good job.
You did excellent.
That is huge $20,000 in one year.
So, okay, sorry.
Scott, now start with your capital allocation.
Yeah, you're doing great with all this stuff.
And it looks like I would estimate that you have a just positive net worth here with all that kind of stuff,
with a lot of good things going on and a huge savings rate, as you outlined with that.
Well, I'll have to verify some of that.
But here's the problem is you have $35,000 a student loan debt.
You've got $4,500 in various credit cards.
You've got a loan against your $457 with that kind of stuff.
And what this tells me, and you're saving a lot of money.
So what that tells me is that all of this is going towards retirement accounts in these types of things.
And you're not cash flowing your day-to-day life, which is what is going to cause you
you have to borrow against the 457 plan and all that kind of stuff.
So I think we have to make a fundament.
and, by the way, that retirement account stuff is not going to help you with your major goal here in three years taking a sabbatical for a year, right?
The 457, so I can use part of that to do it because taking withdrawals, I don't pay a penalty just regular taxes.
If I'm not working for the year, then my tax could be up to zero.
Yeah, but I wouldn't think of the 457 as an ideal investment vehicle to save for this sabbatical.
It could be good, but like, I just don't know if that's the purpose I would.
place under it as much here. But, but, but, yeah, I think there could be nuance there. I think I could
be wrong on that. But bottom line is, I think you should start, have you, are you familiar with the
concept of financial runway? It's something I like to describe with, with, you're going to be yourself.
Yeah, amount of time you can survive without a paycheck. Right now, you've got what looks like
what to be one month of financial runway with the cash in the bank right there. And that's a function
of both the amount of cash you have on hand and the spending you have, which is large,
being pushed out by these debts here. And remember, if we're backing into a three-year time picture,
the payments on that 35,000 in student loan debt is going to be an offset to this that we have to
think ahead to, right? So what does this all mean? I think what this means is that we need to start,
I wonder, and I'll just put this out as a hypothesis, if we stop contributing as much to the 401K
and maybe even significantly reduce the 457 contributions and begin attacking these debts much more
aggressively, starting with the credit card debt to begin knocking those out. You say you're saving
$20,000 a year. That's a lot of tax deferred. It's called $15,000 a year if you're not doing it
inside of your tax deferred accounts. That means you can knock out that credit card and the $457 loan
in no time and then begin deciding whether you want to invest or if you want to figure out a way
to cash flow, like build assets outside of your student loans. I'll just stop there as a very
high-level thesis. What's your reaction to that? I completely agree. I started that process this year
because when I wrote everything down and saw that 20 grand number, I was like, man, I could really
use that as cash somewhere. And so I started with, I think,
it took effect in February where I was taking that money I was putting to my 457,
450 a paycheck, and just dropping down to get just the match. And then now that's how I got that
$5,000 in my savings account. And so a combination of that together and then, you know,
our semathies and then just kind of like just putting $10 a week in there, just little stuff.
And so that's why that built up that way. And that feels really good. And now I'm afraid to spend it.
comfortable do you feel having 5,000 in the bank? How good does it feel? Oh, it feels amazing.
So, so let me let me tell you something you're not going to like here. I would suggest you knock
that down to 1,000 and put all 4,000 towards your credit card debt, right? And here's, here's why.
I don't think, I don't think you should be feeling comfortable right now. I think, I think you've got
high interest credit card debt. I think you got a 457 loan. The student loan debt is going to be a
different animal. You're going to need a longer term repayment plan. Maybe that's when you bump it
back up to $5,000 after that, and then you can begin paying those down. But the point of having an
emergency reserve is to protect against an emergency, and credit card debt is an emergency, in my
opinion, around that. And so that's where, I think, you know, having zero is too little. That's
going to be very stressful. But having $1,000, I think if you go back to being uncomfortable for another
couple of months, you can make a lot more progress against some of these things and be sitting pretty
at the end of the year, feeling really good about having a lot of these debts knocked out and a different
investment approach with some of these things. Mindy, what do you think? I do not agree and would
give a different suggestion. So right now you are contributing enough to get the match, which I think is
fabulous. That is literally free money. That is, what is that, a hundred percent return on your
investment simply for putting it in there. So I love that you're doing that. I would say you
You said that you're able to pay or save $1,000 a month outside of, like, that's just the difference
between how much you make and how much you spend.
That thousand, is that what's going into the investment account, or is that just extra stuff?
That's what's going into my savings account.
So that $5,000, that's been that $1,000 since February and also the Stimathies.
Okay.
So I would say a couple of things.
And I have the benefit of having read your application and people who are listening have not.
you had a second job and you said that you cut down your hours after paying off a couple of credit
cards. I would start maybe not, you know, doing, taking on more hours consistently, but letting
everybody know, hey, if you need me to cover your shift, I can cover your shift. And picking up
time and throwing that at the debt. You've got a credit card with a $540 balance at 21%. Take every
dollar you have and throw it at that, knock that card out, and then cut it up, unless it's your
oldest card. Whatever is your credit card that you've had opened the longest, keep that open,
but don't use it anymore. I don't like these 22, 23% interest rates. I want to yell at the banks
for charging that. That's a lot. Mindy, I'm a little confused, though. Where do you disagree with me?
I'm not done yet, Scott. I disagree with taking the $5,000 out of your savings account and throwing it
I would rather have that in the bank because that's when you get those really crazy expenses that
you have to cover and you're like, oh, where am I going to get this money from?
Oh, a 22% interest rate credit card.
So we'll knock that one out in April or May.
We will knock out the next one has about an $800 balance at 23%.
So you have restaurant budgets.
I want you to cut the entire restaurant budget and throw it at those cards.
And then get those two with the sub $1,000 payments or balances, get those, knock those out.
And then start attacking the one that has about a $2,700 balance.
And again, attack that until it's all gone while keeping the $5,000 in the bank because we want to make sure that we do have a buffer.
So with that part, I disagree with Scott.
but the rest of it, I like...
I want to continue to disagree here because...
Okay.
Look, you just said, hey, if you have an emergency,
you've got to get an open,
you've got to then pay for it with a 21% credit card.
She's already paying 21% in her credit card
with what's going on here.
So that's a guarantee.
Why not take the guarantee and pay that off
with the $5,000 she has in the bank?
And then now she's got $1,000,
which is still a buffer between her and the world.
And if she does need to finance something,
she's clearly got the credit limit
to be able to put that,
back on the credit card if the tires do go out and blow and those kinds of things. But I think
we're arbitraging interest rate really inappropriate there, 0% for 21% with cashias on hand.
And I'm not convinced, Tierra, that you need to overhaul. I think you should still be kind of
focused on like, hey, this is still heavy lift mode, but you're not, I don't think you're that
far away from being out of heavy lift mode and moving into more of like a longer term
sustainable approach with that. I wouldn't cut your hours quite yet, but you're probably only
like two or three, four months away from on the second job from being in a place where all
these debts are paid off there. So I do want to talk this out there. So like I had been doing
exactly what Mindy was talking about with that debt snowball and throwing things at those credit
card debts. But my partner needs implants, dental implants, and it was about seven grand.
So I had to pivot and like really take all that money I was paying toward those credit card debts
because those credit cards were at three grand apiece before about this time last year.
And so I had to pivot all that money.
This car started saving for that sensile surgery because he needs molars.
Steak is delicious.
Well, that's a great use of that.
That makes perfect sense.
That's, I think, a great.
Is that what, have you already paid that?
Or is there, are you?
No, I haven't paid that at all.
I've taken all that money.
We were paying, we were paying 150 a week on each one of those cars until we got rid of him.
and then just popped up that where he needed the surgery,
and a surgery is about $7,000.
And so once we get to that $7,000 in that account that has a $5 grand,
then we're taking all that to pay for a surgery,
and I'll be back at zero.
Okay.
So that makes sense.
I think that negates the entire argument,
Mindy and I were having around that.
But it's also a good discussion to have that.
Okay.
So then have you checked with the dentist,
does he offer any sort of financing plans?
Some dentists will offer like a zero percent financing just so you can get the work done.
And if this just doesn't, then maybe another dentist.
I definitely will.
Oh my goodness.
I didn't even think to think about that.
Yeah.
And I mean, even if it's like a really, really low interest rate, maybe, you know,
5% down or do they offer a discount for paying cash and see if there's anything you can do
to tweak that at all because these, I have found that dentists frequently have a financing program
that they can offer. You know what, Scott? I'd like to look at the rental property as well.
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Definitely.
So I pay $200 a month for property management.
Their rent is 14, 15.
And the mortgage now, now that PMI has dropped, is 10, 10, right?
And there's HOA fees of 200 a year.
And the house is about 10 years old, so everything's starting to kind of, you know, break.
Great. Okay. So we have 14, 15 in rent. We've got 200 or we've got 10% in property management. How much in property management? $200 a month in property management. We've got a 10-10 mortgage, which is 1210 now in expenses. And you've got 200 and H-OA, which is 14-10 in expenses, right? No, 200 a year. So 20 bucks a month. Sorry. Oh, sorry. Oh, okay. That is much more, makes much more sense. How much do you budget for maintenance and utilities and those kinds of things?
zero so anything that's left over after the mortgage and after property management just kind of sits in
its own account and that just builds up and then I pay out the HOA fees and right now in that account
it's maybe $450 this is my third year renting that house out and if anything comes up then it comes
out of that account first and then I'll look to my savings and see what I have to cover it how did you
come to own this property it's my first house so I moved here from Georgia about
10 years ago and I moved to Dallas for an opportunity to be out here in these woods and now I just
have it. I didn't want to let it go because a part of my plan after that gap year is to come back to
it. Awesome. What's the mortgage on this property? How much do you estimate it's worth?
The house might be worth about $220,000 if I do a couple updates like flooring and painting and
stuff. And the mortgage I have left is $100,000. Do you have $120,000 in equity sitting in this
property if these numbers are correct. What I am seeing right now in the real estate market is that
there aren't enough houses for sale. So houses, you listed at 220 and you get into a bidding more.
And I'm not familiar with the specific market that it's in. So take this with a grain of salt,
but I'm seeing this across a lot of places in America. Now is a really great time to be a seller
and not a great time to be a buyer because there's just nothing on the market. I'm wondering if
it would be a better financial choice to sell it and take that $120,000 in equity, pay off the credit
cards, get the dental surgery, pay off the student loans, put anything else in after-tax investment
funds, and just cut ties and be done. If your plans are to travel, you don't need a house.
And you would be renting it out, which is great. But if you could, it's not cash flowing.
Like if you were making $700 a month on this property, I would be having different advice.
But you're not making very much of anything.
It's 10 years old at the 10 year mark.
Little things start to break and then bigger things start to break.
And then all of a sudden it's a big pile of deferred maintenance and nobody wants to buy it from you at any price.
You said this is your third year renting it.
Does that mean that you lived in it up until three years ago?
Yes.
Okay.
So we are hitting upon the section 21.
21 timeline.
So you can sell it and hopefully you have been taking depreciation as a rental.
And so because when you sell it, you are the government's going to assume you did and will make
you pay depreciation recapture when you sell it.
But you lived in it for two of the last five years, which means that it was your primary
residence.
You can sell it and pay no capital gains taxes.
So this is something that you're going to want to.
to talk to an agent about and see if you can list it. When does your current lease end?
December of this year. Oh, my lease, the place I'm renting now or the tenant's lease?
The tenant's lease. December of this year. Okay. So you can sell an occupied property if you have
like history documentation for, you know, when they pay rent and they're a great tenant and here's
all the things and here's their lease and blah, blah, blah. It's a lot easier to sell a tenanted property
with a good tenant, as opposed to somebody who isn't paying rent and causing you a lot of headaches,
and you're like, I just want to get out of here and don't want to deal with this anymore.
So I would start the documentation process of how great of a tenant you have, if you have a great
tenant.
I would talk to a real estate agent about what is it worth, how long do they think it will take to sell,
et cetera.
And I would talk to your tax preparer or a CPA and ask them about the depreciation recapture.
Can they double check that you've been doing all this?
the things properly so that you can make the most amount of money and take the most advantage
of the Section 121 exclusion for primary residence capital gains taxes.
I just want to chime in and say I absolutely agree with everything Mindy said.
I think that's brilliant to think through that whole thing, Mindy, about, hey, there's,
if you've lived there for two of the past, the difference between what she's saying,
if it's a rental property and you sell it for 220, you're probably going to pay.
pay taxes on like, I don't know, 50 grand of gains at least, right? I don't know. I don't
remember, it depends on what you bought it for. But if it's your primary residence, because you
apply for this law, because you, for the tax exemption here, then that's a hundred thousand
in cold, hard cash that will come flowing into your bank account the moment you sell this property.
I also want to emphasize, this is not a cash flooding property. You are, you're bringing in 14, 15
a month in rent. You are spending 10-10 in your mortgage. So that leaves us with $300, I'm sorry,
$405 left between that. You have $200 in property management, which means you $205. Then you're
going to experience vacancy, 5% vacancy on an average basis. So that's going to be $70. Now you're
down to $130. You're going to have repairs every once in a while. I would budget $250 to $300,
at least for those repairs. Those will come up a month, and those will come in large,
infrequent chunks when you've got to replace the roof or remodel the place and those types
of things. So I think you're losing money on average on a monthly basis. It's just that most
months you don't have that big maintenance expense or vacancy expense, and that's why it's
masking. It feels like a little bit of money is coming into your account every month. But I think,
I think if you run the analysis with those numbers, you'll see you're losing money here. And you got,
this is the key to the kingdom, in my opinion, for a lot of this stuff. You take 100 grand,
you wipe out every single one of those debts, you flush your emergency reserve with six months
of reserve, and you begin dumping the rest into a long-term investment strategy or even another
rental property that makes more sense as a rental. I think that completely solves tons of your
problems there. And then you can get back to, okay, what's my sustainable average monthly
approach right there? I mean, that's your year off right there inside of that.
stuff if you wanted to take that tomorrow. You've been completely debt-free and have 60, 70 grand
in the bank, it seems like, with that. Rather than losing money on average every month with this,
I just want to completely emphasize everything Mindy said with how much I agree.
Thank you, Scott. And you have student loans that are deferred right now. You could even do a little
bit of playing around. You pay off everything that isn't deferred and then just hold on to that for a
minute. Make sure that all of the things are going through and you don't have any big expenses.
And then when they come out of forbearance, you knock them out.
But yeah, I love that idea. Definitely something to think about. Talk to your partner, you know,
run the numbers, talk to an agent who's more familiar with the market and just see what sort of,
you know, maybe you think it's worth 220, but it's actually worth 240 or 180. But either way,
you've still got a lot of money sitting in that property that could be put to better use.
And again, if it was cash flowing much more, I would have a different suggestion.
But not every property makes sense as a rental.
I just sold my former primary residence as well because it didn't make any sense as a rental.
And it had appreciated a lot.
Yeah, either that or you need to rethink through how you make these numbers look better.
For example, can you refinance?
can you find a different property manager that's cheaper?
Can you raise the rents?
Those types of things.
I mean, it could be that there's a way to make this into a better cash-filling property.
But as it stands now, if you believe those numbers are pretty reasonable, this is a loser
as a rental property.
But it's a huge winner for your overall financial position.
If you can pull off directionally what we kind of just articulated there.
What do you think?
First thing that comes to my mind is like, and that's just a scarce.
mindset that I have. I think if I sell that house, I won't be able to get another one ever in my life.
I don't know why I think that, but that's just the truth, right? Everything in San Antonio's been like
skyrocketing and price. And so yeah, I'd sell it and I knock out, you know, these short-term goals,
but like, what do I do 10 years from now? I don't know. Well, that's where I think you need a
philosophy or system for investing in general, right? So let's pretend this property didn't exist.
The philosophy for me would be, hey, every month you're saving $1,500 to $1,500,
you're dumping that towards the highest, best, next investment, which right now is your credit
card, right?
Because that's a 21%, 23% guaranteed interest rate return, right?
And once you've knocked out all those debts, then it goes to, what's my long-term
investing philosophy?
For me, for Scott Trench, that's, I invest regularly in index funds.
I dump, you know, a few thousand dollars a month into index funds.
It might be a few hundred or whatever it is.
And then I also set aside money to regularly buy real estate properties, bit by bit year after year, one by one, over the course of a long period of time.
So I think you need to have a philosophy about, hey, how do I want to build wealth?
And what's my why here?
It sounds like your why is at the very beginning, just like, how do I get enough to take a no stress year sabbatical where I write my book and do some traveling and all that kind of stuff?
But you probably also wouldn't mind being able to have plenty left over in your retirement accounts
that those are compounding at the very least, even if you're not pulling other wealth through that year you're off, right?
Or there's in the market having a chance to grow.
And so, you know, I think that's the strategy is you need an investment philosophy overall.
And you're not in position to act on that investment philosophy because of the tick-e-tech things.
I used that earlier inside of your financial position with your credit card and your 40,
you know, 457 loan and the other kinds of stuff. And so if you can clean that all up,
get your six-month emergency reserve really in place and feel good, which is, which is,
you know, you can also look at that as your, your sabbatical fund. What's the word you used?
It was not sabbatical. A gap year.
Gap year, yes. So, yeah, that's your gap year fund or, you know, 12 months,
putting that in there. And then everything else on top of that,
for the next couple of years goes towards your investment philosophy.
But I think that that's got a, you know, that probably needs to happen simultaneously with the
sale of the rental property or, or if you like that suggestion, for you to feel good about it.
Because right now you're like, oh, I just have that property.
It's, I bought it when it was so low.
Look at how high it is now.
There'll never be another property like that.
But there's always more assets, whether they're rental properties, whether they're stocks,
whether they're small businesses you create, whether it's a book you write that,
becomes an asset for you. There's always another asset that you can build or create with that.
I just don't think right now this asset is helping move you towards your goals.
I hear it you're saying. And deep down inside, I pretty much agree. But man, I'm like the first
homeowner in my family. It means so much. Take a picture of the home and frame it on your wall.
And then once you sell it, you can buy that dilophysis, whatever plant that you want for $1,000.
No more plants.
How about this?
No more plants until you sell the house.
Oh, bro.
Let me list it today.
All right.
Yeah.
Do not list it today.
Do not list it today because you have some research to do before you do that.
Sorry, this is not a rush decision.
I just want to be careful because like the CPA may have some stuff about like there may be a $30,000 tax question here, depending on whether you are.
are or are not qualifying for that rule where you lived in it for two out of the last five years or
whatever it is. So that's, this is definitely one to say like, okay, some of that $5,000,
I'm going to put towards higher to CPA to advise me on this. That might be really good money
well spent in the context of this decision, even though it will be painful. It's a few hundred
bucks. But yes. And we are recording this on April 12th. We've got tax day coming up. There isn't a
CPA on the planet unless it's your brother that's going to.
answer your call in the next three days. So, yeah, definitely. I thought they extended the deadline.
They might have extended the deadline, but there's still CPAs that are cranking it out right now.
So I'm not sure. I'm not sure what the deadline is. Actually, Carl's doing the taxes today, though.
So maybe something's going on. Are corporate taxes due on the same time? Or maybe that was March.
taxes are due when your shareholders want them.
Now, you asked about, you mentioned that this is like your first time, you know,
first person to be a homeowner and all that kind of good stuff.
So take a, as many said, take a picture of the house.
And then compare that to all the pictures you're going to take on your your gap year trip
and ask yourself which one, which collection you want more.
And ask yourself like, hey, do some mental math.
like, is that gap year really three years away after you do this?
No, look, look, if for my seat, like, I would be, Tony, I would kind of be like,
oh, financial freedoms, a key goal and a gap year will not help towards that.
But this is certainly an option for you that has a cleaner financial outcome than,
sorry, if you could go with the sell the property option, pay off all those debts and fund
the emergency reserve, you might be six months away from having the option to take the gap year.
and you can spend the next three years significantly padding your financial position
or taking that gap year in six months to a year from now.
That really puts things in perspective.
And I have a CPA that I work with and that calls coming up here, I think,
because it was extended to like May the 15th, I think.
And so our call is coming up as soon as I get my life together.
And, man, so you saying that as I stutter over,
that kind of puts things into perspective.
Because this was a pie in the sky years from now.
I don't even know what reality will look like possibility, right?
My gap year.
But if the house is what's holding me back.
Well, well, well, what's holding you back is something's going on
where you've got a 457 loan and credit cards and you've got this expense that you're
not saving up for.
So you are having an overall day-to-day month-to-month capital allocation issue where you're
putting too much money, I think, in retirement accounts, and you don't have a clean set of debts
and making progress against those. And that's the root cause. So make sure you, we talked about
plant jokes here earlier. So you really need to get kind of consistent, get your framework down there
and say, if I'm going to bring in a thousand a month, then 800 of that is going to go to my
emergency reserve until it's here. After that, it's going to go to investment. Some of that's going to be
in retirement accounts. Some of it's not so that I have optionality and runway in my life with that.
and, you know, first things first, I've got to clean up those debts.
The 120,000-year rental property is just a huge kickstarter or jump-start on that journey
because you can just clear out all those debts and fund your emergency reserve and begin investing
big chunks of that into the market if it's left over and you're smart with that.
So I don't want to say that that's the, that's not the whole thing in the financial position.
The bigger issue is I think whatever you do on a month-to-month basis over the next five,
10, 20 years with your finances.
But that's pretty nice to have 120K there that could give you all of those options at
once and just completely clear this out and you restart with a with a prototypical financial
balance sheet, I guess.
I understand what you're saying.
Okay.
Well, and think back, how much are you paying on each one of these debts?
It's $50 here, $150 there, $300 there.
All these little things add up.
and now that those debts are wiped away, all that money is back in your checkbook.
So that can go into your emergency fund.
Or like Scott said, if there's $120,000 in equity there, all of your debts are wiped out
and you're putting some more money into your emergency fund.
What does a fully funded emergency fund look like?
Is it three months of expenses, six months, 12 months?
Could you fund your entire gap year if it's 12 months?
with the sale of this property after you've paid off all these debts and then still continue
with whatever payments you were making to these other debts, still put that into your emergency
fund for your current emergency fund. I just think that there's a huge opportunity, but like Scott
said, let's not make a rash decision. Let's look at all the numbers and see what the condition of
the market is, see what the property is actually worth. You know, call up an agent, the agent that sold
to you and say, what could I sell this house for? What are other houses in, is it a condo or is it a house?
It's a house. Okay. What are other houses in this neighborhood selling for in the last 30 or 60 days?
And that is going to be a really great example of what you can get for yours. Maybe not exactly.
If they're all selling for 220, you could sell yours for 215 because it's got a tenant in place.
But that $5,000, you know, less is going to not be any sort of significance.
in your future.
And you're going to be a millionaire real soon
once we get all these debts knocked out
with the sale of this house.
And then you can go back and buy it later.
Yeah, your run rate,
I bet you,
how much do you think these debts
are costing you on a monthly basis right now?
Oh, I know that number by heart.
The minimums all get me by like $130.
But like what we've been paying on it
is like $550 a month.
Great.
And then when your student loans,
get out of forbearance,
How much are those going to be a month?
$3.25.
Great.
So you're going to have to be spending at least $400, $500 a month to make the minimums on all of these debts
come September, right?
And you will want to pay $800 a month.
And your core problem coming into this call was you feel like you're making good income.
You have two jobs and all that kind of stuff, but you still feel broke.
It's because of this, right?
If you can knock those out again, you can.
you can either do that by grinding out with your financial position,
well, you should do that by grinding out with your financial position
and continuing to have the cash flow come in on those places, in those places,
keep a tight budget and all that kind of stuff.
But you can knock them all out with the sale of this property, I think.
Okay, so we've kind of covered, it could have covered that one, I think.
What else can we help you with today?
What are some other things you want to ask about,
or do you want to keep going on that?
or what's the next best thing we could talk about for you?
So I am putting a lot of way for retirement.
I did put a lot of way for retirement.
Going forward, I'm trying to get that back and really build up that financial.
Remember, we were talking about putting up more into cash.
But I keep seeing, like, these huge expenses pop up, right?
Like, my partner's general surgery is going to be $7,000.
I know we're replacing our car soon.
We've been without a car payment for the last three years, and it's been wonderful.
it's just, I guess, like, keeping that motivation going because, like, it's,
every time I reach a milestone, it's like, uh-oh, here's something else.
Uh-oh, here's something else.
Well, I think you're probably not budgeting for those, right?
So in your budget, you need to have, like, a miscellaneous reserve fund that's, like,
500 a month or something like that, that says, hey, like, every 10 years, 15 years,
you know, depending on you're going to need a new car, right, with that, every,
there's going to be a health situation every five, seven years.
And that could be molars.
It can be break your leg while hiking or, you know, I don't know.
What's a gardening injury you can get?
But those are the kinds of things you've got to prepare for inside of your budget, I think.
And so I imagine that, are you comfortable with the concept of CAPEX with your rental properties?
No.
Okay.
So maybe this is a good framework for you.
the roof, how much does it cost to replace a roof?
Like 15, 20 grand, right?
Yep.
So it's called 20 grand.
And how often do you have to replace a roof?
Once every 20 years.
Once every 20 years.
That means that once every 20 years you spend 20 grand.
That means you spend 1,000 on average every year for your roof.
That means you spend on average 80 bucks every month for your roof, right?
And that was one of the things I pointed out to you and your cash flow that's not being
and calculated inside your rental property.
You got the same thing that happens in life, right?
The new car, all that kind of stuff.
And that has to be budgeted for,
and you need to kind of make a monthly guess
as to what that number is.
For a rental property, I always assume it's about $250
because I got $80 for the roof.
I got, you know, the kitchen needs to be updated
every 30 years in some capacity,
the electrical system or the whatever, right?
Like all those things together will be $200, $250 for kids.
for the rental property. And that same kind of stuff will come up in life, right? My car insurance,
I pay once every six months in a six-month installment, you know, and so on and so forth.
So I would, I think that's that, what do you think? Does that resonate? Do you think that that's
not being included in your cash flow right now? Oh, 100%? It's not. It's not. And it puts it
into like a different perspective, too. Yeah, you're $100 a month positive cash flow. If you take
Scott's $250, you're actually losing $150 a month by holding onto the rental property.
I did some very rough, very quick math. You had submitted a list of debts that you had when
you applied to be on the show. I added that up and I got $42,715. If you sold this and
profited $120,000, you would have, after paying off all your debts, you would have $77,285.
So your gap year is ready as soon as you close on this house.
You funded it.
Because you make $50,000 a year right now.
So you and you have six months left when you come back from your gap year.
I mean, you're going to have expenses, so probably not.
But you have funded.
Oh, wait.
No, yeah.
Sorry, I'm not thinking straight.
You have funded your gap year.
You have $50,000 to just go off and do whatever.
Plus, you can come back and take six months to find a job before.
you need to really start looking, probably more because that's income, not expenses.
So sell that house is my suggestion.
And of course, your mileage may vary.
You should definitely talk to an agent.
But that seems to be the easy win here that gets you, that doesn't even get you back to
zero.
That pushes you way over to a positive net worth and additionally positive net worth.
And all of this, all of this.
all of your dreams can come true.
Or you can just continue to own this house.
Yeah.
Well, and I will say, I would say you get all that cash.
But remember, like, the danger, I think another danger that you're in with this is just you could pay off all those debts.
But if you don't change your budgeting and your cash flow management strategy to account for what we just discussed,
then you're going to constantly find yourself losing yet again for reasons that you don't understand with that without making a very conservative cap
allocation. So if you think you're saving $1,000 a month right now, you're probably only saving
$500 because of the stuff that's coming up with the bowlers and all this other kind of stuff,
right? And so that, you know, just make sure you're using that same framework when you're
estimating how much you need for the gap here and for all those other types of things as well
if you decide to sell a property and keep those proceeds. But I think that's, I think that's a,
that and the concept of capital allocation and this bogey in your budget, the KAPX thing,
are the two root causes here.
I think of why you're doing well,
but you don't feel like you're doing well
because it's not showing up in your bank account
and your freedom quotient
or your financial runway.
That makes perfect sense.
And so, like, was it by saving so much
the last three years in my retirement account
is kind of not giving me a clearer picture
of how much it really costs to live?
Is that what you're saying?
No, I'm not saying that.
I'm saying more, I think that money in your retirement accounts isn't really helping you
like feel free right now. And I think that over the last three years, you've probably deferred
capital and like things that like these haven't been accumulating for or haven't been budgeting
around the fact that you're going to have these kind of like one off large events that
require $7,000 in cash. And so that that because that's a monthly expense that shows that
up once every three years in a huge expense, and you know, and it all comes at once, right?
It's never like you have just one $7,000 expense every five years.
You have all three hit in the net and at the same time for 20 grand.
And then that just completely erodes everything.
That's why you got a budget for that, pay off your debts, keep an emergency reserve so that,
you know, hey, you've got a six months emergency reserve.
That's, that's what, $5.30 grand.
Great.
And you just dip into that and then you rebuild it and then you're good to go whenever these
these items do come up.
No one likes spending all of that money on these types of things.
But to plan for it, I think, is the key.
So I would say that your biggest issue is that you haven't been putting into your budget a solid,
like, hey, that's my $500.
That just is for the unproduicted thing that will come up.
And then the next one is that instead of paying off the high interest debt and building your emergency reserve,
I would say, in my opinion, you've been putting too much into the 457 plan, which is not giving you freedom right now and is not helping you feel better about the situation or advance you towards some of your goals.
All four, put the 457 plan.
Once we're in a better position with the debts, and we've got a solid emergency reserve.
Okay.
I'm excited for what is going to happen for you in the next couple of months because I see your eyes lighting up and like, ooh, ooh.
And I think this is going to be a super awesome time.
I would caution against just like jumping in with both feet.
Definitely think through and what can I do with this rental property.
Is it, you know, can I still qualify for this section 121 exclusion?
Because then that $77,000, and that's not a quote, I don't know the market, but that $77,000 is yours and you pay zero to Uncle Sam, which is the best amount to pay to Uncle Sam in my.
opinion. I do much better with my money than he does.
And, Mind, you're saying she'll clear 120 grand and 40 some odd will go to the debts at the 77
is what's left over. Is that right? Yes, yes, the 120. And that's, you know, that's ballpark numbers.
You still have closing costs. So, uh, real estate fees and, you know, title insurance and all that
random stuff. But right now is a really great time to be a seller. So maybe somebody will write you an
offer and offer to pay some of those expenses for you. So definitely start doing research and look
into the numbers, you know, get a quote from your agent. What do you think this will sell for?
And this is my, you know, I have $100,000 left over. So that's on the mortgage. So once that's
paid off, there's just, I see a huge opportunity here for you. And then, you know, when you're
trying to decide which offer to take, go for the one that has the most chance of closing.
So the person who's putting the most money down or has the best credit score or their lender sends a letter that says they're so approved, blah, blah, blah, rather than the person who's putting 3.5% down and they're barely qualified for the loan.
But, yeah, you can always come back and buy this house again later once you're a millionaire.
Or, yeah, or once you're accumulating $30,000 to $50,000 a year, $20,000 a year in cash that you can place towards it and you buy a property like this every other.
year according to your system or all that kind of stuff. You don't have to be a millionaire to buy
this property. No, when she's a millionaire, she can go back and buy it so she continues to own it
because it was her first house. Oh, for all the happy memories. Yes. Yeah.
That's exciting. I have goosebumps and I'm definitely going to do their research and contact my
CPA and my old agent still works. And so I reached out with him too and like, oh my gosh,
just all that felt so far away. And now like it's possible. And that's,
that's the whole point of the show because when you're in the middle of the slog it's hard to
you're like oh this is the way I'm going to go well not necessarily there's other ways that
you can go but it's hard to see different options so that's what we're here for I'm so excited
you have to send me another note in like three or six months after you've made the decision
on what you're going to do and have, you know, progressed a little bit more.
I want to follow up with you and see what's going on because this, oh, I have so much
excitement for you.
I appreciate y'all so much.
Thank you.
Oh, Tierra, I'm so glad you've reached out.
This was wonderful.
Thank you so much for sharing your story with us.
This is going to be a fabulous, fabulous episode.
Yay.
Thank you, guys.
Oh, my gosh.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Scott, that was Tiara with her fantastic story. What did you think? I thought it was a great story. I'm really grateful for her to coming on and sharing all of that. And I think like I mentioned in the intro, there's a lot of really good lessons to be learned from her story and what's happening to her financial position. I think by opening it up, looking through it, dissecting it, there's a lot of really powerful lessons that maybe a lot of folks listening can apply to their own lives and see if they're having capital allocation.
issues or missing CAPEX as part of their budgeting process and their personal life or rental
property investing. Yeah, or sitting on a rental property that really isn't quite cash flowing what you
think it's cash flowing. I think Brandon said on a property, or on the Bigger Pockets Real
Estate podcast one time, he's like, there are some properties that never make sense as a
rental. In order for you to cash flow, they would have to pay you to buy the property. And I think
that's true. There's some properties that just don't work.
So, you know, we're here at bigger pockets.
We promote real estate investing all the time, but not every property makes for a good rental.
So I like that she's open to the prospect of selling it.
I think that laying out some numbers, and again, not a hard quote on those numbers,
but I think laying out some numbers can really open your eyes to the possibilities.
So I am super excited.
I really hope she comes back in three or six months to tell us all the fabulous things that
her life has had happened once she started, you know, looking with a more fine,
who's comb at her expenses. Yep. The contents of this podcast are informational in nature and are
not legal or tax advice, and neither Scott nor I nor Bigger Pockets is engaged in the provision of legal,
tax, or any other advice. You should seek your own advice from professional advisors, including
lawyers and accountants regarding the legal, tax, and financial implications of any financial
decision you contemplate. Okay, Scott, should we get out of here? Let's do it. Before we do, Scott and I
absolutely having a blast with these finance review episodes. Some of these scenarios are really
making us flex our mental financial muscles, and we're super excited to continue this.
If you have a quirky situation or a situation that you haven't heard us talk about before,
please apply to be on the show at www.w.biggerpockets.com slash finance review. Okay. From episode
192 of the Bigger Pockets of Money podcast, he is Scott Trench and I am Mindy Jensen saying,
May the Force be with you.
And I guess as the Catholics say and also with you.
