BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 306: Finance Friday: Self-Employed Income and Short-Term Rental Investing
Episode Date: June 3, 2022If you want to invest in real estate, you’ll need a few things: a property, an income source, and some cash. If you’ve got all three, you should be able to finance your way to owning a rental pr...operty, but this becomes a little more challenging when you’re someone with fluctuating income. Entrepreneurs, especially those without a consistent client base or consistent schedules, have a seriously hard time tracking, budgeting, and saving their income which changes every other month. Chelsea and Wade feel this way as well. They’re both entrepreneurs, but, as a filmmaker, Wade has far more fluid income than Chelsea does. Some months Wade will bring in tens of thousands, while other months, nothing. Chelsea can subsidize the household budget with her more regular income, but even then, the couple needs to keep a strong safety reserve to ensure they’re never going too over budget without their bank account being refilled. Thankfully, Chelsea and Wade are very good at managing their money and may actually have too much of it. They’relooking to dive into real estate investing to start building a path to financial freedom. With a serious amount of safety reserves, they’re thinking of buying a short-term rental as their first investment property. But, does their inconsistent income threaten their vacation rental plans? In This Episode We Cover How to manage emergency funds and safety reserves when self-employed Retirement accounts vs. rental property investing and which is best for early FI Saving for your child’s college and why a 529 plan may limit your child’s future choices Self-employed health insurance and whether or not getting a job is worth the lucrative benefits The most important metric to look at when investing in short-term rental properties Whether or not your cash position is too conservative for your investing goals And So Much More! Links from the Show BiggerPockets Money Facebook Group BiggerPockets Forums Finance Review Guest Onboarding Scott's Instagram Mindy's Twitter Apply to Be a Guest on The Money Show Podcast Talent Search! Subscribe to The “On The Market” YouTube Channel Listen to The “On The Market” Podcast: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, BiggerPockets Check Out Mindy’s 2022 Live Spending Tracker and Budget How to Find Free Money to Finance Your Education & Avoid Extensive Student Debt Is College Worth the Cost? This 30,000 Variable Study Says “Sometimes…” Why 40% of Master’s Degrees Aren’t Worth It (and Which Are) w/Preston Cooper 529 Plan Rules - Nerdwallet article Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the bigger Pockets Money podcast show number 306 Finance Friday edition,
where we interview Chelsea and Wade and talk about budgeting with variable income.
So I own my own business because I want to have the flexibility and the autonomy and the freedom
to do whatever I want. And that's sort of my personality anyway, is I don't really want
people to tell me what to do. So having the flexibility to do that is really cool because I
I can work three days a week and see the amount of number of, do the amount of number of sessions
that I want versus somebody telling me, I need you to do 35 sessions a week and then me just
walking around as a burnt out zombie.
Hello, hello, hello.
My name is Mindy Jensen.
And with me as always is my OB-1-Kanoid-all co-host, Scott Trench.
The force is strong with our recommendations in this episode, Mindy.
That came from our Facebook group.
Somebody suggested that.
And I love it.
Okay, 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, go on to make big-time
investments in assets like real estate, or start and scale your own business will help you
reach your financial goals and get money out of the way so you can launch yourself towards
those dreams.
Scott, I am super excited to talk to Chelsea and Wade today because they have a problem
that a lot of people have.
They have variable income, widely variable income,
and it can sometimes be difficult to budget
when your income is up one month and down one month
or down two months in a row
or down even three months in a row.
You can start to feel like,
I'm not really doing it right.
So today we talk to them
and give them some ideas for how to handle their variable income.
Yep, love it.
I think it was a great discussion.
They're doing a lot of,
a lot of things really right. And I hope that it's an interesting perspective on what life is
like in building wealth from a self-employed perspective with two spouses who are self-employed.
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Before we bring them in, let me satisfy my attorney by saying 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.
I don't think I would be a very good auctioneer. Do you, Scott? No, but I think you satisfied our attorney.
I did. Chelsea and Wade are on the path to financial independence, but they have widely variable
monthly income, anywhere between $5,000 a month and $26,000 a month. Coupled with ever-changing
monthly expenses, they've been having difficulty creating a budget. And on top of that, they're both
self-employed, making insurance another wrinkle to iron out. Wade and Chelsea, welcome to the
Bigger Pockets Money podcast. I'm so excited to talk to you guys today. Thank you so much for having us.
This is a dream come true. Well, let's get into this because we have a lot to unpack.
What is your income and where does it go? Okay. So we are both self-employed, like you said.
And I'm a professional counselor with a private practice. And so my income varies, but it's more
consistent than his. So last year, I brought home 51.1.1.1.5.1.5.5.5.
$1,000, and that came out to about like $4,000 a month.
And that's net income after tax, hitting your bank account.
Great.
Yeah.
And so my income varies a lot more because I'm a filmmaker.
And so I do projects where, you know, sometimes I'll make like $26,000 in a month.
And sometimes I will make $0 in a month.
And it also gets a little more complicated on the business side because I have a really high
gross income. Last year, my business gross was like $225,000, but that's because I'm paying lots of
contractors. So it may look like I'm making a lot of money, but after expenses and contractors,
my income for my net is much lower. Awesome. And what is that, what does that kind of come out to
annualized? Okay. So, so my net income is $86,000 for my business. And it's again, after tax.
After text. Yes. Awesome. Okay, great. So that's not, that's not, that's not bad. It's about 137,000 in total annual income.
Yep. Any other sources of income throughout the year? Nope, nope. Not right now. Great. What about expenses? Where's that money going?
Okay. So we'll kind of go through everything. So our mortgage insurance taxes comes out to $1,684 a month.
Utilities range from 250 to 350 a month.
Groceries are 8.50, eating out 120.
Household products like cleaning stuff.
Sometimes kids stuff is in there, too.
300.
Gym, 170.
Gas, around 300.
That varies to.
Subscriptions like Netflix, 27, health insurance, 488.
because we don't have traditional health insurance, we pay for a lot of extra medical things
out of pocket. So that can really vary from like zero to sometimes 700 or more a month.
Car insurance is 100. Life insurance is 31. We budget for entertainment around 200 a month.
Miscellaneous, 200. Kids stuff, 200. These vary a lot.
child care. We aren't currently paying for child care, but we will be in the summer. That's looking
like it'll be around $850 a month for the summer, but then both our kids will be in school,
so we won't pay during the school year for child care. We give $500 a month. We save $300 a month for
our kids' college. Then we each have spending money of $50 a month. And then,
we have a dog and she requires sometimes, most of the time, very little, but around $45 a month.
Yeah, so total that is $6,000.
Around $6,000 is kind of...
Yeah, around $6,000 is our monthly expenses.
Awesome.
And that seems like a super reasonable budget from my seat from that with maybe a little
room, but not much from a cut perspective.
Is that kind of how you're feeling about it?
Yeah, absolutely.
I have been tracking our spending with Mind.
these recommendations since November or October-ish. So we've always kind of had a budget or more.
It's been like an outline of like, this is what we're kind of planning, but because our income is
variable and there's lots going on, it's sort of like this is the best guess. And so we just kind
of go for it. Well, let's go through your assets and liabilities. Can you walk us through where
you're putting that money? Yeah. So Chelsea has a Roth IRA. She's got
10,000 in there. Her SEP IRA has 26,000. I have a Roth that's five and then a SEP that is
7500. So total retirement savings right now is 48,000. And that is, so that's our retirement.
And then you can go through the others. And then right now we have two kids. We have a four-year-old
and a seven-year-old and we have about 6,000 saved for college. It's about 3,000 each right now.
We have an emergency fund of 30,000.
We have other cash savings in a savings account,
just a general savings account of 34,000.
And then we have our current home equity at 140,000.
And we also have money in our separate business accounts,
but that's for like some of it's going to go to pay us,
but some of it's going to go to the business.
So I don't know how you want to do that.
Yeah, it's mainly business savings, or it's for cash flow for business.
Or paying ourselves.
Yep.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So our total net worth is around 300,000.
Awesome.
So half of that's in, essentially half of that's in your home equity.
Another third is in cash, and the rest is in going to, is going to, in various retirement accounts is how to think about that.
Yeah.
Does that 300,000 include the business account?
money right now. Yes.
Yes.
That does.
Yeah.
And so right now, Chelsea has about 11,000 in business savings.
And then I have right now about 40,000 in business savings.
So that does kind of equal more to the 300,000.
And you said you had 225,000 in expenses or in revenue for your business last year.
And then you had like 130,000 expenses between contractors and taxes.
Mm-hmm. Yep. Okay. So that, yeah, that seems super reasonable there. What are your goals and how can we help you?
Yeah. So we just wanted to chat with you guys a little bit about if you had any suggestions on our variable income situation.
We have come a long way with that and we've actually gotten the opportunity to achieve a lot of goals while we have been on this journey because Wade's income has been variable for our most of our,
marriage for the last 12 years. And I've been in school for a lot of that. So it's really within the last
five years that I finally started making money, which has helped us achieve paying off debt.
We paid off $50,000 in student loans. Awesome. And we saved up a ton of money last year to put
a down payment down on a house for us. And so we have like a lot of good momentum going.
But we just want some help with kind of if you have any suggestions on the variable income.
And then we're really long term looking to be financially independent.
And we would like to start moving into real estate and specifically investing into short-term rental real estate.
So we can have some residual income.
How long did you say you've been both generating income at this level?
So at this level, probably three years.
Yeah.
Okay.
Great.
So you're not going to have any problem from a debt perspective.
You might have to talk to a couple of lenders who are going to be more comfortable with self-employed folks, but you'll have enough income history with both of your professions to be able to qualify on that front.
Exactly.
Well, just kind of like looking at this great job.
You've got a great situation.
You've got a really strong financial foundation.
You've got $300,000 in net worth.
You have no consumer debt.
it sounds like aside from your mortgage on this.
And you've got a huge cash position and are beginning to invest and have a,
very good start from an investment standpoint in these things.
So I love the fact that you have a lot of cash.
You may have slightly too much cash.
We can think about that from there.
But it makes a lot of sense to do that when you're self-employed and to have separate
business and personal items there.
And you generate 50 or 60 or 70,000.
thousand dollars per year, although it is lumpy, seasonal, or perhaps periodic. I'm not sure
which is the right term to describe your income. But I mean, this is a great, great position here.
So like the fundamentals, I think, are all super strong as an outside observer about what you're
currently doing right now. Yeah. Thank you. I really appreciate that. Yeah. So where would you
like to start with the next steps here? I want to start. I'm going to look at this as Chelsea brings in
4,000 a month and Wade is bringing in on average 7,000 a month. That's $11,000 a month with
approximately a $6,000 a month spent. So that's a $5,000 a month delta that you have. That's great.
We don't spend enough time celebrating. So yay, that's fantastic that you guys are spending so
much less than what you are bringing in. But on those months when you're only bringing in $5,000, it's
not going to feel like that. And if there's several months like that in a row, it can feel like
there's this huge deficit when then Wade brings in the boom, here's 26,000. Yay. You know,
that's great. I would suggest if I was in this situation, I would have a savings account or a
bucket where I put extra money from these $26,000 months where there's extra funds over and above what
you're spending that you know you will need for the lead months and have money in there available
for when there's not enough. And go back through your spending and your income statements and
look and see, you know, is that three months a year that you have, you know, less income than what
you're spending or is it more like six months and then you get this one giant month? And that's,
you know, that's a research opportunity for you guys to look into where, you know,
where you're going to feel comfortable having that extra bucket.
You do have this $34,000 in other cash savings.
Does that have an earmark or is that just a random bucket for whatever comes up?
That is the money that we're saving for a short-term rental.
Okay.
And so our goal is to basically put as much money into that as possible so that we can have
a down payment for a short-term rental in the next year. That's, that that is our goal to be able
to purchase some real estate in the next year. So that, that is why that number is okay.
And then the emergency fund, do you, like on a month where you're coming in lower than
your spending, where is that money coming from? It's the, it's the emergency fund. I mean,
typically that $30,000 savings account is our emergency fund. So if we have a low month, we take money
out of that 30,000 to pay for personal expenses.
And then when we have a bigger month, we recoup it and then put it back so it stays at 30
as best as we can.
Okay.
And does that feel mentally comfortable to have that emergency fund ebbing and flowing like
that?
Or would it feel better mentally to have this bucket where the emergency fund is $30,000?
And then the light income this month fund is, you know,
$10,000 because you know you're going to put more in when you need it, but that's not coming out of your
specific emergency fund. A lot of this personal finance stuff is a mental game where you have to just
kind of convince yourself that this is how it's going to be. And sometimes you can't. So you have to
allow it to be the way that your mind wants it best. I mean, that's so like flufy to say. But, you know,
if your mind is having a hard time wrapping around the fact that you can pull from your emergency
fund, maybe having an income bucket will allow you to be okay with it. Does that make sense?
Yeah, absolutely. So that's something to consider, you know, take some out of the emergency
fund and put it into your income bucket. Or maybe you've got a $26,000 a month coming up and then you
can fill up that little extra emergency bucket because you're not doing bad at all. You're doing really
great. Number one, you've got a great average income and you're spending far less than that.
But again, three months in a row of less than average income is going to not make it feel like you're doing all that great.
So that's that mental game that your mind can't.
Like sometimes you can't see the force for the trees.
Yeah.
I mean, look, there's lots of right ways to do your cash.
Yours is among the most right I've ever seen.
I love this.
You have a lot of variable expenses in your business account weighed.
So you have 40,000 bucks.
And Chelsea, it sounds like probably much less.
So you have 11,000 bucks.
in that business account. Those seem like reasonable numbers. I'm sure you arrived at that
through similar logic. You have a 30,000 is your number for emergency reserve. You're probably
feeling really uncomfortable if that ever dips below like 15, and it probably never does,
is what would be my guess. And so you're just like, pull it a little bit out, replenish it.
That's the point. That's exactly how you do it. And then everything else goes into,
and you've already made your determination. Your prioritization is short-term rental. It's not
index funds. It's not your 401 case. You've already determined that. And that's why everything else is
going to the investment for that. So I think it's perfect. And I think your next step is,
you can fiddle with that if you need to, but it's a great, it's a great system. I love it.
And now you've got the surplus going ready to be invested into real estate and your short-term rental.
So can we hear about what you're thinking from the short-term side?
Yeah. So something I wanted to say about that. Currently, I am also investing into retirement
and so is Wade. So I feel that we,
are in our early 30s and we are just starting our quote unquote traditional retirement savings.
And this was something I wanted to ask you guys. We feel like we just started. But, you know,
so I'm like, do we need to be, right now I put in about $1,000 a month into either Roth IRA or the SEP IRA.
And I don't know how much do you put in? It depends. Like right now, I'm putting most of my extra money
towards the savings, towards the short-term rental.
But when we don't have a big goal,
I do about 20% of my net income
will go towards my retirement accounts.
That's kind of what I've been doing for the last six months,
or I guess last year.
So, yeah, what Chelsea's saying is like,
we're trying to figure out,
do we try to come at this goal of a short-term rental
in a more balanced perspective
of still putting money towards our retirement accounts, our index funds, essentially, and save up as
best as we can for the short-term rental, or do we go, like, all in and put in all of our
extra cash towards saving for the short-term rental so that we can buy it sooner than later?
Well, I think that as long as you get the money in in the calendar year into your retirement
vehicles. It shouldn't, it's kind of six of one, half a dozen the other, as my mom used to say.
That's the same thing. So I think it doesn't quite matter there. I think it's whatever you feel
is the one that's going to get you to your goals faster, which my instincts, based on what we've
talked about just this far, is going to be a short-term rental. So, you know, let's think about it.
Over the course of 2022, if things go the same as last year, you're going to generate 60,000
additional dollars, or let's call it $45, $40,000 additional dollars because we're now at the end of April
with this, right? So that's going to be $74,000 that you can add to your other cash savings
to buy the short-term rental. How much do you need from a down payment to buy that property?
Yeah, we're still kind of in the research phase right now. We've thought about probably a property
around $600 or $700,000. And so in order to get to like the 10%, we're going to need, you know,
60 to 80,000 dollars in cash. But with closing expenses and all there is with the short-term
rental, maybe a little bit more. So maybe like 90 is probably more realistic of what we would
really want. Yeah. And just to clarify, we're looking to buy a short-term rental in a traditional
sort of short-term rental market like Smoky Mountains or Florida, Joshua Tree. We're kind of
looking at some of these more traditional places and willing to put quite a bit down so that we can
see more residual income every month from it. Okay. Well, you are in position to do that right now.
Your cash position would allow for that if you were to pull that from these other places. You're
probably uncomfortable with doing that, which I think is great. It's a great mentality to have with
the way you manage your cash. But you have $110,000 in cash right now to buy that short-term rental.
if you, you know, and so one way to reframe that would be to bucket all of your cash together into one lump and say,
what is the lump amount that would make me feel comfortable with my overall cash position to move towards that?
The other option is keep doing what you're doing and pile on that amount and you know that you'll get there within 12 months.
You'll be able to generate about $60,000 and be probably at the minimum threshold to comfortably buy that investment with your outside cash position.
I see Mindy shaking her head here.
That gives me the hebie-jeebies to suggest that because that's every.
single penny that they have thrown into one investment and then there's not really a buffer.
I'm not saying they should, they should do that. I'm saying that they could do that right now.
So it's their conservative nature that is allowing that that that is going to put them in there,
probably appropriately to some degree. But like, it doesn't have to be a year from now.
You could say, you could, you could look at your situation and say it is reasonably responsible for
you guys to have $50,000 in cash across all of your cash accounts based on the numbers you
provided us instead of $110,000 in cash, right, across all of those different accounts.
And to run your life out of one big bucket because there's no, there's nothing preventing you
at the end of the day from taking a distribution from your businesses or committing capital
back into your business, right? It's just, you literally just move the money from one bank to
the next if you want to do it in order to take care of that.
So that's more what I'm saying is you can do that right away and you can probably still
contribute something to your retirement accounts this year because of the surplus cash that you
currently have and the cash flow that you're going to generate.
So I don't think you, I think this is one of those cases where you have to prioritize to some
degree.
You can't probably max out your contributions to your 401, I guess your SEP IRAs and your
Roth is this year, but you can do some good damage there and still probably accumulate,
put yourself in position to buy that short-term rental by the end of the year, I would think.
Yeah, that's what kind of we were thinking, too, is by the end of the year.
Yeah, and I guess another question I have for you guys, too, is do you think it's, like,
smart for us to try to purchase a home that's a little bit more money that has the potential
to have higher earnings?
or do we be more conservative and purchase a home maybe in the 400 range, but has way less
earning potential? Is it worth that risk of spending more for more money?
I think you buy, you invest for ROI, right? And in your case, that's just a matter of delaying
by a few months if you think that that, to stock up more cash, right? You can save up, you know,
400 versus 600. That's a third bigger. So you need to save a third more cash. I'm going to put that
down to generate that. As long as you're, you know, you're not going to be crushed by the
mortgage payment, which you have to underrate to. But I like investing for ROI. I'd rather have
one, one bigger, one investment that produces a great return that's a little bigger than a smaller
investment that produces less net return, less ROI, less IRA. Yeah, that was kind of our thought, too.
Yeah. My thought with regards to demand is I have a really, really big family, like enormously big family. And there aren't that many properties that we can all fit into comfortably. There's like six in America that can fit us all. And they're always booked up because there's only, like I'm talking they sleep 60 people where it's a huge house that sleeps 60 people. And those are always booked up. And yes, it's going to cost like a lot.
more than $600,000.
But there's a huge demand because there's no supply.
So that's something to consider.
I mean, obviously not a 60 sleeper, but, you know, maybe there's people that are looking
for 14 or 20 sleepers that, you know, you can, a little bit more initially may yield
a lot more, a lot less vacancy because somebody is always looking for that and they'll,
you know, oh, well, I'll just reschedule my vacation for when this is available.
I know that's how we scheduled our vacation is when they actually had a weekend that was available for us.
So I wouldn't have thought that there were a lot of demand for big properties like that.
I think it'll 100% vary by market, right?
So there's no reason, if you're interested in investing anywhere in the country,
there's no reason why you can't find a similar ROI at 400,000 price point as 600,000 price point.
If there are specific markets that you're studying and know really,
well, that may well be the case and that may may display your decision there. For example,
I wonder allowed if right now, like the best way to generate ROI in like Denver, Colorado
would be to buy a million dollar property with an ADU and a single family house on it and live
in the ADU and Airbnb out the single family house because you can't Airbnb property in Denver
unless you live in the property as a primary residence. So probably very few people who can actually
purchase a million dollar single family residents are willing to do.
that and therefore there's going to be very limited competition and lots of demand for that property.
So there may be something like that that gives you an advantage in whatever market you're in.
Per Mindy's point, bigger, better, nicer property, more amenities.
Yeah, I think you're thinking about it.
Great.
Another thing to think about is the taxes.
You're looking at Florida.
Are the Smoky Mountains in Tennessee or Kentucky?
I get those two.
Tennessee is the area that we're looking at.
I get those states confused.
And so Florida, Tennessee and California, not knowing anything about any of these, I know California
is going to have super high taxes.
I know they're going to have income taxes.
I know they're going to have, if you do an LLC in California, they're going to have LLC
taxes.
That's going to be just like not doing any research at all.
That's going to be at the bottom of my list simply for the taxes.
And it doesn't matter if you live there or not.
I believe. So that, like, Florida is very tax-friendly. I think they have lower taxes. I know that Smoky Mountains is the number one most visited national park in the country because it's so close to like two-thirds of the population of the country or something like that. So that's a really great market. And they had a fire a few years ago that, like, wiped out all of everything. So they don't have a ton of,
a ton of property, like they've been rebuilding, but their rules are more relaxed, I believe,
with regards to rental properties like this. I think it took out a lot of hotels too, but it's
been long enough that I can't really remember now. So, like of these three areas, I like the Smoky
Mountains best. I would reach out to a real estate agent and just ask, like, what can I expect
from a property in this area? Like, what am I looking to pay?
What is my vacancy rate going to be?
And what are my taxes going to be?
Like, if I can make the same amount of money in Florida as I can, smoky mountains, but, you know, for half the price, then maybe Florida is looking better.
Or if I can make, you know, if I have less occupancy in Florida, then maybe Smoky Mountains looks better.
I'm sorry to throw California under the bus.
I love it.
Where do you live right now?
We live in western Colorado.
What's the, but what's the, what, what, we know, we're in Colorado.
So what, which, what's, what, grand junction?
Grand Junction.
Why, why not, why not consider the, the, the areas local to Grand Junction, like Palisade or why, why, why, why go out of state?
Um, we've definitely thought about that. I, we need, we're just kind of doing, you know, kind of in the beginning of this journey, too, with like, even just reading general things about having a short term rental.
Um, and I just don't know the market of short term rental here very well.
but I know that tons of people actually, you know, obviously come to Palisade for the wineries and
tons of people come to Fruta for the mountain biking. So there's definitely need here, I think,
but it would be a good, like Mindy says, research opportunity to look into because that could be a
really great route to go, especially maybe for our first property, because it's local.
We maybe have that comfort that we could just zoom over if we needed to kind of thing.
Don't they have world-class fishing and elk hunting over near Fruda and Craig and like all that area?
I was talking to somebody who was saying that there's a need for that as well.
That's not my thing.
So I don't know, but somebody else.
Yeah, I mean, there's definitely on the Colorado River.
There's lots of fly fishing that's hugely popular.
More towards the mountainous areas, like the hunting lodges are super popular for sure.
In Fruta, like in like the city, like Grand Junction, and then there's Palisade and Fruta.
There's not a ton of like hunting tourists that come to the town.
It's more in Fruta.
There's the bike riders and then hikers, outdoorsy people.
And then Palisade is the wine.
There's lots of wineries.
So there is definitely lots of potential where we live.
The hard part is there's not a whole lot of houses available.
It's just that the market's super hot right now.
Everybody wants to buy stuff.
Like when we bought our house last year, we sold our old home.
And I think we had 10 offers in the matter of like 24 hours.
We got like $30,000 over asking price.
So in Colorado in general, it's just a really hot market.
So I think that's why we're like, if we want to like try to buy in this crazy market right now.
But in a sense, it's kind of like that everywhere, really.
Yeah.
I think that's how I would think about it.
It's going to be like the whole nation has got issues around those types of things.
And what it comes down to is I think in terms of ROI, right?
And the major advantage to investing 20 minutes, 30 minutes away from where you live
is going to be the ability for you to self-manage the property in the early days
and learn a bunch of those things instead of paying that fee to somebody else.
And that's not going to be a 10% management fee when you, for a short-term rental.
It's going to be 18% or more.
or a significantly higher one.
And so that's not including the cleaning fee, by the way.
So this is not saying you're going to go and clean the property,
although you can do that as well to save money.
But that's the management costs will be significant for a lot of these short-term rentals.
And if you can at least get started with that, you know,
you're going to be able to, by the way, trying to self-manage something in the Rocky Mountains.
Like you don't know if there's like certain times of year that
have actually really high tourist activity in the Rocky Mountains because of this event or that
happens at this point in the year or whatever. And you do know that for palisades. You're going to
be able to, you know, put in place the right pricing at those times of the year. You're going to know,
oh, this is my heavy demand time where I need to make all my money. And this is the light demand time
when I'm going to make less and want to pounce on, you know, a long term, you know, someone who wants
to stay there for three months in this part of the year, whatever that is. So those will be advantages
get, especially in the early years, I think, from investing locally as a bias as opposed to
somewhere you don't know as well because you don't live in there. And it's just, it all comes down to
ROI. So if it's close, the tie goes, in my opinion, to something that's highly local to you.
If it's not close, then you go out of state. That would be how I bias you to think.
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We'd love to talk.
Business.
Yeah, we also have Moab, like an hour away.
And a lot of people go to Moab.
So there's a lot of opportunity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Moab's kind of expensive, too.
Who'd we talk to that wanted to build huts next to Moab?
Oh, yeah.
I can't remember.
We had a guess.
We thought about that.
Yeah.
Like build a tiny house somewhere.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think there's a lot of stuff in your back door that is maybe not, you know, your
back door.
But I think, I think, you know, lots of people around the country are probably thinking, like,
well, Colorado is a great place for short-term rentals for a whole bunch of reasons,
even as you guys are thinking about going somewhere else.
So something to think about, but that would be, I would at least explore it.
If it doesn't work out, go somewhere else.
But what I am gathering at the strategic level is you're still early into this journey
and you probably have six more months of research and self-education to do before
buying your first property.
And so what that might do is you're probably going to accumulate that cash, that
kind of put you in position to buy that within the next six to 12 months, regardless of whether
you max out your retirement accounts or not. And so if you're not sure and you're still in the
research phase, maybe you do bias more towards the retirement accounts and those types of things
for this year or for the next couple of months and then kind of get more aggressive about stockpile
in the cash when you have much more clarity on what you want to do from a real estate investment
standpoint. So that would be maybe one takeaway from this conversation that would be one takeaway from
that might be worth considering.
Yeah, I think that's good.
Because like you're saying,
we're not quite at the point where we have all of our ducks in a row
as far as our education.
Like we've been researching the Smoky Mountains
and like Destin, Florida and Old Coast area quite a bit.
And so we know a lot about that.
We've looked at kind of just online,
just looked at properties and what the ROI would be,
that kind of stuff.
But we have not really looked around us.
at all. So I think that's, that is a really good suggestion for sure. Yeah. Yeah. I think there'll be,
if you're going to find an inefficiency or another way of putting that a good deal,
um, it's probably going to be local to you as well. So there will be something that,
oh, this is exactly what the market needs. And I need to make these changes and that's how I'll
do it. That's going to be a lot harder in Destin for you unless you, unless you're from there,
for example. But yeah, I know that, know that market particularly well for some reason. So yeah, cool. All right. Well,
Do we have, what's another, are there any other areas that we want to explore here and talk about?
Yeah, there was one more area regarding our kids college fund.
I haven't really heard a lot of talk about this.
So I think this would be a great conversation to have.
I'm not sure that our kids will go to college.
Times are changing.
Things are changing.
You can do so much now without going to college.
Wade didn't go to college.
I went to a ridiculous amount of college.
But I think, I think we need to kind of figure out,
a direction to go with this because we've kind of just been putting some money in a college savings
thinking, okay, we want to save something for our kids, but we don't really know what to do.
I think ideally I would like to save in an account that's more flexible than a college account,
even if it doesn't have the super, super tax benefits to it, just so that we can utilize that money
how we need to at that point for them. I don't know. Do you guys have any thoughts on this for
saving saving for kids. And our kids are seven and four. Yeah. I have lots of thoughts on this. I have two kids.
They are 15 and 12. So way closer to college age than yours are. You have saved $6,000 for your kids.
And that is $6,000 more than I have saved for my kids for college. And I do believe that my kids are
going to go to college, at least the older one. But that's not for sure, for sure, because you never know
what your kids are going to do. And I didn't want to save in a 529 plan because if I put in $10,000 and then
she doesn't go to college, but it has grown to $29,000 over the course of her life, I only have
$10,000 for me. I can, like if I want to pull it back out, all I get is what I put in. I don't get all
those gates. I don't know where they go, but they don't go to me. They don't go to her.
I could reallocate that to her little sister if she was going to go.
I could give it to a niece or a nephew, but I don't get them back.
Whereas if I put that money into an investment account, all of that money is mine.
Or I can use it for her college.
Or I can put her through wedding planner school or film school or whatever she wants to do,
I can use that money how I choose.
Or she can say, you know, I'm leaving.
the house and I'm never going to talk to you again. And then it's still my money. And, you know,
that's a horrible situation to be in, but I don't want to give that control to somebody else.
So because you have $6,000 in there, I would just opt to leave it if I was in your position.
I would opt to leave it. And I would open up an after tax brokerage account in my name, not in the
child's name, and put money into there for their college and or just put money in there and
and use it for college when it comes up or use it to, you know, however you want because it's
your money. And then that is, now that is going to, because it's an after-tax brokerage account,
that's going to count against your income or assets for FAFSA. But that's like, that's a problem
for 10 years down the road. Yeah. I completely agree with Mindy, I think, at the highest level
in principle there. And I'll add in that, you know, I, I, I, I completely agree with Mindy, I think, I completely agree with Mindy, I think,
I speculate that college education costs are going to come down in real dollars relative to
inflation over the next 10, 15, 20 years.
The reasons why I think that will happen first have to do with the amount of student loan
debt out there.
Either one political party is going to come in and forgive a large amount of that debt.
And after that happens, you'd think that there will be new restrictions on new access
to debt to fund college.
which will reduce ease of which people can get loans,
and therefore bring cost down and demand down.
Another party may not do that,
and there will be a reform of student loan debt at some point in the future,
regardless if some of those events happen.
So I think there's going to be a student loan restructuring
at some point in the next decade or two that will impact college affordability.
We're also becoming more and more, I think, cognizant of society
about the ROI of college and how it may not be necessary for a lot of things.
things. So I think it will be less of a, you're going to college and more of a calculated
decision depending on on your career field. So I think for those reasons, it may be, it may be a
risk that folks are over-saving for college, not in the short term, not in three to five years,
but maybe in 10 to 15 years, perhaps. That's a speculation. I don't know if that's right,
but that's what I'm going to speculate on personally for my family. And then second, I think that
if you do want to pay for college, a better way to pay for college, well, a way to do that
in conjunction with what I just said, it's just build wealth in general in real estate or stock
accounts or whatever it is that you're investing in. And then use that wealth to provide benefits
for your family like private school. If your kid ever needs that for some reason, for a special
reason, or college, or a trip around the world, or tuba lessons if they're superstar at that,
whatever it is, that I think is a better, more beneficial way to just build general flexibility.
And the 529 plan does not offer that for the most part.
So I probably won't contribute much at all to a 529 plan with a possible exception of,
I know my kids going to college.
I'm two years away from college.
I've got a pretty good clear idea of what college is going to cost.
And I'm going to take advantage of that plan in the short term here to put that money in
and take it right back out for college in a few years.
So I might do that at the ending stages.
getting really close to college. That would be how I think about the 529 plan and saving it for college
at a high level. Yeah, I really like that. And just a couple of weeks ago, we released an
episode with Robert Farrington from thecollegeinvestor.com, episode 297, where we talk about
paying for college and saving for college in lots of different avenues. I think it was episode 41 or
44 with Zach Gautier, where we talked about different ways to pay for college as well.
Both of those are really great episodes to listen to.
And we had episode 251 with Preston Cooper, where he talked about the ROI of a college degree,
something to consider before you put yourself or your children through college.
and he was just back last week on episode 293, or a few weeks ago on episode 293,
talking about the ROI of a graduate degree.
So, you know, things to consider as you're getting closer to college age, but not, I mean,
that's not imminent for you, but those are just, you know, different ways to save.
There's, in both of those episodes, there's longer term and shorter term ways to save
for college. Cool. I like that. It would just be ashamed to have a lot of money in the 529 plan
and then not use it for that. Yeah. This is not the worst problem in the world. There's other ways
to deal with it. But if I'm going to build a couple hundred thousand dollars in wealth over the
next 10 years via investment vehicles like short-term rentals, I'd rather just be able to use that
for whatever the heck I want, including college, and take a little bit of a tax hit or less
tax advantage situation, then have it all kind of locked up in there and then have to get creative
or in terms of dealing with it once it's in the plan. Yeah, I agree. Absolutely. It's
anything else you wanted to talk about? Yeah, I was curious if you guys had any thoughts on the
health insurance situation. I know that that was something you mentioned in the intro, Mindy,
that, you know, maybe you had some ideas about that. Currently, we do not have health insurance
and we have a medical sharing plan, as well as a membership to a general family doctor that we pay for monthly.
So we have had some health issues actually come up in our family within the last year,
where it's looking like we are going to need some sort of traditional ongoing insurance.
We have some kids that need some speech therapy and occupational therapy and meds and regulars.
and regular therapy and all the things.
And so it is looking like more of a traditional plan
is going to be something we will be moving towards
within the next year or two.
I was going to say when I first saw this in your notes,
I was reminded of a recent bankruptcy by Charity Ministries,
which was formerly known as Trinity Healthcare.
They basically just said,
we can't afford all of this, so we're shutting down.
and the health care system in America is broken and needs to be fixed.
But the health sharing, I have friends who really love health shares and I have friends
who have been stuck with big bills because the health sharing decided not to pay it.
So I don't like traditional insurance, but I think that's going to be the best way to go about it.
I don't know if a health savings account and a high deductible plan is going to be best for you.
Somebody was listening to the show a few months ago and said that in almost every case, a health sharing plan is better than a traditional plan when you take into account the premiums and the premium deductible and the fact that the health sharing account can grow.
So that's something another research.
health hSA plan and hSA yes i'm sorry health savings plan yes thank you scott um that's what i was thinking
yeah and i'd agree with that you guys have a great cash position so there's no no there's no like like you can
have a high you don't want to get crushed by a huge medical bill um with that but you can have a high
deductible i think um given your cash position um and probably will be able to arbitrage that although that
that will depend on your specifics of your personal situation let me zoom back out for a second here though and
say and say this, why do you guys work in your own businesses instead of one of you taking a job
that pays similar?
Like, what is, what's the rationale for that?
That could be perfectly reasonable.
I mean, there's a lot of advantages.
I just, I just want to hear you guys think through it.
Yeah, I think that's a great question.
Yeah, for sure.
So I've run my own business for about 12 years.
So I don't really know what it's like, honestly, to work for a staff position.
So I have a lot of benefits to running my own business where I can make my own schedule.
I don't have to answer to somebody.
I don't have, I don't feel like they have a glass ceiling above me as far as my income goes.
And so I think, and just my personality.
Like, I like to work on various projects a lot.
And I feel like if I work on the same thing over and over going to get bored and I don't put a ton of my creative energy into it,
So I would say that for me.
I just really like the benefits of having my own business more than having the security of a staff position.
And that's for me.
Yeah.
So for me, I could easily go out and get a job with the degree that I have for an agency doing mental health counseling.
That would be very easy to do.
That's a lot, though.
So working in mental health is a very hard job.
So I own my own business because I want to have the flexibility and the autonomy and the
freedom to do whatever I want.
And that's sort of my personality anyway, is I don't really want people to tell me what to
do.
So having the flexibility to do that is really cool because I can work three days a week
and see the amount of number of do things.
amount of number of sessions that I want versus somebody telling me, I need you to do 35
sessions a week and then me just walking around as a burnt out zombie, it would be really hard.
So that's kind of why.
I think it's great.
I will just say that's another one.
I would just challenge you to at least explore, right?
Corporate life maybe isn't so bad as what you're making it out to be in some of these
cases with it.
You might be able to negotiate some benefit, some flexibility.
for example, or find a position that gives you some of those benefits.
And that would solve your health care problem to a large degree if one of you guys were to
consider that.
So not a deal breaker.
You clearly are working around that right now with things, but it will be, you will have
expensive options if from a self-employed perspective, the same challenges that people
who are just financially free or full-time real estate investors or full-time agents will face
from an expense standpoint.
Yeah, I think that's a good point to really think about
because even trying to go into real estate,
it is harder for us to get a loan
because we are self-employed,
even if we do have the years of income to back it up,
it's still a lengthier and more difficult process.
At least it was when we were buying our two primary residences
that we've bought in before.
So that, and then I think looking at
the specifics of if I were to make, because it would probably be me, if I were to make a certain
amount of money working for somebody else, how much money that would be with the health care
already taking care of in a sense? I know it would have to pay some versus how much we're going to
have to pay out of pocket for health care. Yeah, I think there will be a decision to make there,
and you absolutely, you will have to make your employer much more money than you cost, which is, you know,
the deal with that.
But it could be that it brings in more income, provides similar flexibility,
and gives you health care options depending on how that goes.
So it could be an option.
And it may provide financing opportunities.
So if, you know, if those tradeoffs are unacceptable from a time perspective,
you guys are going to get rich one way or the other.
You spend a lot less than you earn and have a really strong position.
So but just something to think about as we're doing that is,
maybe revisit that assumption and at least explore it because it would make a lot of these issues
easier in the short run.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, that's kind of what I was thinking too, Scott.
So I'm glad you brought it up because now you're the bad guy.
Yeah, we're supposed to tell you how to quit your job, right, on the show?
Yeah, exactly.
Instead of go get a job.
Yeah.
But I wonder if there could be flexibility to that.
Because just because I work for somebody doesn't mean I could also not, you know,
own my own business on the side.
The goal for me, actually, is to not be a therapist come when our kids graduate from high
school and to move into more of maybe like an online business or a coaching type position
so that there's even more flexibility because I anticipate Wade probably traveling
a lot more at that point once his career.
starts moving and he doesn't have to be home all the time because we have kids.
So something about I'll tell you at Bigger Pockets, some of our team members work 32 hours a week
or 30 hours a week or whatever with that.
There will be some rules like we can't give you not full time, can't give you the full benefits
and there's some legal things and all that stuff.
So there has to be, you'll have to meet some minimum cutoffs in order to qualify for certain
benefits with that, but there may be plenty of flexibility.
and opportunities out there, depending on what you're interested in.
This was a lot of fun.
I had a great time talking to you guys.
I think you've got a lot of opportunities available.
We want to keep going until you're feeling good.
Yeah.
Do you have questions?
No.
Do you guys have questions for us?
No, I think we got a great snapshot of your position.
It sounds like you, you know, you had a great journey to get here and you've, you've
really, you got a very disciplined budget, consistent income in spite of being self-employed.
So that speaks to a lot of discipline and hustle that over a long period of time.
And clearly it appears to me that you've come into this position of having this surplus
and having some of the options to begin exploring more serious investments, I'll call it,
in the very recent past and really have all your ducks in a row at this point.
And now it's kind of a directional thing.
Do I want to go into short terms?
I want to go into long-term investing in my 401K, those types of things.
And I think it's, you know, there's an art to that.
It's not really a great answer.
And I think we got through a good amount of that.
I think you get big assumptions to challenge is the self-employment, always the right path.
Certainly is working for you guys, but it could be reassessed to make it easier.
If one of you were to get a job, that would solve some of your problems here, or at least go a long way towards that.
And then I think that the college savings, we gave her opinion on that, but we don't really have a right answer.
And I love the way you manage your cash for the most part.
I think it's a really smart way, given your current situation.
If one of you were to get a job, that would change because you would not likely need to
have quite as much cash either in your businesses or in your personal preserve.
Okay.
Well, thank you so much for your time today, Wade and Chelsea.
And we will talk to you soon.
All right.
Thank you.
Okay.
That was Chelsea and Wade.
And I think they have a lot of things going for them.
First of all, we didn't sell.
celebrate enough that they're literally spending like 50% of their income. It just may not seem like
it when they're in the middle of the month or two or three in a row where they have less than
what they're thinking about spending. Yeah. I mean, they've crushed it. And this is,
this is something that we see now fairly frequently on the money show where we've got a couple
who's really mastered the basics of money, have a good framework in place, and are just kind of
popping up after several years of having paid off debt and built this stable financial position.
I'm like, what do I do now? I have like, and that's, that's a great thing. It's just,
it's exciting because you've, you've paid off that debt, you've got the cash position,
you're starting to do the retirement accounts, the surplus is there. And now the ocean of
opportunities is exploding in front of you. And it's overwhelming. Do I go in a real estate? Do I
do this with my business? Do I invest in this avenue? Do I invest in this one? Because the, the, the path has
opened up so much because of the good habits that you've put in place. And I think that's
really fun because it's kind of hard to see that other side while you're in the grind of paying
off the debt, for example, which it seems like they popped up out of fairly recently the last
couple of years. So that's exciting and fun. And now it's about kind of forming a plan and
prioritizing that and being comfortable with the choices. And that those choices can involve
investing in 401Ks or self-directed IRAs.
or SEP IRAs, depending on whether you're self-employed or employed, investing in real estate,
investing in stocks, yada, yada, it's just about what you want and how you're going to back into that.
I really liked your suggestion to look a little bit more local for their first property.
I thought that was a great idea.
I think that there's going to be a lot of opportunity that maybe they don't really, they hadn't
considered just because it's so close.
You know, and our market is expensive, but it's also really desirable.
There's people that are coming here all the time to take advantage of what we've got here.
So, and, you know, when your property is an hour away, you're not necessarily going to drive to it all the time, but you could drive to it if you had to.
And it's a lot easier to drive an hour than it is to hop on a plane to go to Florida to check out your property.
Yeah, I'm like, my wife and I vacation in Palisade, right, which is like right where they go.
we stay at an Airbnb and we spend lots of money there and think it's a great, a great experience.
So it's just, it's just kind of funny to me like, oh, great, I want to go out of estate to the Rocky
Mountain. I've never been to the Rocky Mountain, or what was it, the Smoky Mountain, the Smoky
mountains to vacation before. Maybe I'll go there someday. But that's like, it's just like,
oh, this is what's in our back door and people come from all over to go hang out where you live
at various times in the year.
Yeah, I like that.
Yeah, I hope they look into it a lot more.
Yeah.
Okay, Scott, should we get out of here?
Let's do it.
You know what?
Before we do, I want to invite people to apply to be on the show.
If you would like us to review your finances, please apply at biggerpockets.com slash finance review.
And if you would like to tell your money story, apply at biggerpockets.com slash guest.
Okay.
Now, from episode 306 of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast, he is Scott Trench, and I am Indy
Johnson saying grab your pillow armadillo. I wanted to issue a quick apology and say a quick thank
you to one of our Facebook group members, Carly Reichardt. Carly called Mindy and me out, rightly so,
for spreading misinformation on last week's episode of the Bigger Pockets Money Show podcast. We stated that
gains in a 529 plan would be forfeited if they're not used for educational purposes.
And that's simply not true. The gains in a 529 plan,
plan are simply subject to tax and or a 10% penalty when they're withdrawn and used for things
outside of educational expenses or qualified educational expenses. So they can be a powerful and
flexible way to build wealth, save for college, pass money on to future generations, and be used
for other educational purposes. And there's lots of other interesting tidbits about 529 plans.
They're a useful tool in the tax-advantaged investment stack for some people. Personally, I don't
use them. I may use them in the future, but I wanted to correct the misinformation that we
stated last week. Certainly the gains are not forfeited. They're just subject to tax and or penalty
if and only if they're used for non-qualified expenses. So thank you, Carly, and thank you to
the many members of our Facebook group for calling us out. I apologize. We apologize for the misinformation.
We have a responsibility to share truth and the correct information on this show, and we
appreciate when we do get that feedback. So please keep it coming and we will link to some
resources on 529 plans. Thank you so much.
