BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Should You Keep or Sell Your House? (Best Choice for FIRE)

Episode Date: October 3, 2025

Should you sell your house right now or turn it into a rental property? In this episode of the BiggerPockets Money podcast, hosts Mindy Jensen and Scott Trench dive deep into one of the biggest financ...ial decisions you'll ever make with their guest Sean. He is sitting on serious equity but isn't sure what his next move should be. We break down his entire financial situation using a custom spreadsheet model that analyzes net worth, mortgage rates, rental income potential, cash flow projections, and long-term wealth building strategies. This isn't just theory—we're crunching real numbers to show you exactly how to think through this decision. We examine market conditions, tax implications, opportunity costs, and the hidden expenses most people forget when they become landlords. Whether you're dealing with a primary residence, investment property, or house hack situation, this episode gives you a replicable decision-making process you can use for your own real estate choices. By the end of this episode, you'll understand the financial trade-offs between liquidity and long-term appreciation, how to calculate true rental yields, and when holding onto property actually destroys wealth instead of building it. If you're facing a similar decision or planning your real estate exit strategy, this is the most comprehensive breakdown you'll find anywhere. 00:00 Should You Sell or Keep Your House? 01:17 Financial Overview: Net Worth, Income & Equity 02:33 Mortgage Rate Analysis and Current Housing Market Conditions 03:07 Rental Property Cash Flow Calculator 13:41 Hidden Rental Property Expenses and Long-Term Investment Returns 19:30 How Selling vs Renting Impacts Your Cash Flow and Net Worth 21:11 Net Worth Projections: Sell Now vs Hold 5, 10, 20 Years 23:27 Rental Property Cash Flow vs Home Sale Proceeds Analysis 24:29 Best Time to Sell Your House 26:26 Which Option Builds More Wealth? 31:14 Final Verdict: Should You Sell Your House Now? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Today, we are answering one of the biggest financial dilemmas many of us face. Should you hold onto your house or should you sell it? Our guest is wrestling with this exact dilemma right now, weighing factors like market conditions, personal finances, and future five plans. We'll dig into the numbers and help break down a decision that could shape his financial future for years to come. Obviously, this advice is for Sean's specific situation, but this could be applicable to you too. In this episode, Scott shares his screen and runs numbers in a spreadsheet. So if you're
Starting point is 00:00:33 curious to see the actual numbers, head on over to our YouTube channel, which is YouTube.com slash bigger pockets money. Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. My name is Mindy Jensen. And with me, as always, is my not selling his real estate co-host, Scott Trench. Thanks, Mindy. I actually am selling one of my properties. I call it the Pita property. We talk about that another time. PDA stands for pain in the... Bottom. I do occasionally. I guess I will sell my first property shortly here. But Sean, thank you so much for your willingness to share all of your numbers for this episode
Starting point is 00:01:16 of Finance Friday and, of course, setting up a great discussion about whether we should sell or keep a house, which I think is a question a lot of people are grappling with. So thank you so much for your transparency and for coming on today. Thank you so much, Mindy and Scott. Appreciate the time. And it's an awesome. honor to be here. Been a long time listener. So to be on the podcast is fantastic. Sean, I am going to run through your numbers very quickly because I want to dive more into this house deal. So we have a total net worth of $240,000, which is awesome. $20,000 in cash, $76,000 in a 401k, $5,000 in $529 plans with the debts of I've got a credit card of $55,000. I'm sure most of that.
Starting point is 00:02:01 is paid off every month. Assets, $320,000 in the primary mortgage, I'm sorry, in the primary house with a mortgage of $175,000. Income of $138,000, current expenses, about $11,000 a month, which includes taxes, investments, and savings, which you did to make sure you were actually spending or accounting for all of the money that's coming in and going out, which I love. debts, we have a total of $193,000, 175 of that is the mortgage, with an auto loan at 8%. We're going to talk about that. Student loans of $6,000 at 3%. I don't see any reason to pay those off early. No rental properties, no pension or life insurance. So let's talk more about that actual house. Sean, you have $175,000 on a mortgage at what percentage rate? That's at three points.
Starting point is 00:02:58 75%. This seemingly simple decision actually is embedded in a very difficult and detailed financial analysis that will require great precision and wild, big assumptions, right? Like, is the stock market going to perform much better than this real estate investment I'm going to turn my house into? And so there's big guesses we have to make in addition to getting all of the details, right, in a pretty in-depth analysis here. And so if we're going to do a big, analysis like that, we're going to need a big spreadsheet. And your question has allowed me the great privilege of bringing up such a detailed spreadsheet that I've built several years ago. Here, this is available on Bigger Pockets. You can Google bigger pockets sell or keep decision.
Starting point is 00:03:45 And so I've input some numbers here for your home purchase that I've guessed at in a couple of cases on this. You have to tell me where I'm correct or incorrect. And we'll go through all of these assumptions, but underlying all of these assumptions is a more, is a kind of qualifier question of, do you kind of, does your gut kind of tell you, yeah, I want to keep this property because it's in a good spot and it's probably going to do pretty well and attract reasonable tenants. That's the PETA factor, the pain in the, you can guess what, factor here. And that's a qualitative assumption that real estate investors have to have in place. So do you, does a party you want to keep this property in the first place?
Starting point is 00:04:25 And is that underlying much of the analysis we're about to do? I think if you asked me 10 years in the future, I would regret not keeping it. And I say that because even though we didn't necessarily go into it, it being our primary, with it being a rental, there is the numbers actually pencil out where we could rent it if we needed to, where some of the concern is, is because we do have the desire to move in the short term two to three years, we want to be able to do that without putting ourselves at great risk. And so if we're not able to use the equity in order to get kind of what we want for the next stage of life, we may be too high on the fixed expenses for us to feel comfortable.
Starting point is 00:05:20 I think that's a really important factor in this. And there's a number of qualifier considerations that go into that. Mindy, what are some of the things that you would look for most as, in addition to Sean's bias here to potentially keep it that he should be thinking about to round out that bias? My first question is, how are you going to put money down on a new property if you've got all this money tied up in your equity? Because I believe you have $20,000 in expenses. I'm sorry, $20,000. cash. So how are we funding the next house? Yeah, so it would just push our timeline back, to be honest. Our two to three year timeline would probably be a five to six because we'd wait till kids are, you know, in between elementary and middle. Really what that would look like is more aggressive saving. Right now we've kept a relatively light cash position because we have the equity and outside of random house expenditures, like we don't have very many large expenses
Starting point is 00:06:23 that we couldn't cash flow with our current income. We're going to alt tab for a few moments here and be right back after this. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch.
Starting point is 00:06:43 It helps you see exactly where your money is going and more importantly, where your taxed refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your
Starting point is 00:07:08 Monarch subscription with the code pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place. So every decision actually moves the needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off at Monarch.com code pockets. I love Matt, said no one ever.
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Starting point is 00:09:27 I don't know what that computer code is. Let's go through the analysis and look at this based on what we believe. These are going to be assumptions here, right? every financial model. You have to guess it what thing is going to happen in the future. But let's think about some things that we believe in. Let's see how accurate my guesses were here about the inputs before talking to you on this. So we've got the current value at about $320,000. Is that fair for you, Sean? Yep. Right on the money. Awesome. The original purchase price, I have $258. Is that correct?
Starting point is 00:09:53 A little bit lower than that. It was like 205. We ended up refinancing it shortly after we got it. Awesome. This will not matter in our analysis in your situation for a while because you've lived, lived in the property for the last couple of years. So there's a number of inputs here around do capital gains taxes apply? They will not in this situation. But many people we talk to are on the coasts, for example, and they might have a 250 or 500 or much even higher gain. And so capital gain taxes will begin to apply in some of those cases here, which is why
Starting point is 00:10:27 I need that input to do this analysis. Is that around the time you purchased the home in June 2019? Correct. Okay, awesome. And then I have, I played around with some things here at all, admit I cheated in preparation for this with a couple of things. The model here calculates a few of these. I know your balance has 175,000 left. So I guessed at about 197 when you refinanced the property. This is the current mortgage here around September of 2021. And I needed that so I could get your monthly P&I payment and the amortization schedule of where you are against that load. Is that about right, do you think?
Starting point is 00:11:03 Yeah, at ballpark. It's a 30-year mortgage with 3.75% interest. Correct. That gives us our monthly P&I payment at $915. You gave me property taxes. I guess that your insurance premium here to get this 1839. Is that look all, I'll correct you? Property taxes have $200 and annual insurance about $3,800 a year.
Starting point is 00:11:24 The insurance premiums are more like 25. We're currently, so in Texas you have like an escrow account. and they underpaid. So right now our monthly payment is 1,800. But prior to the escrow adjustment, it was actually 1,500. Okay, so you're going to get some money back. Your payment is 1839, which is what I was backing into. But you're going to get some money back from your escrow at some point.
Starting point is 00:11:52 So your payment is really closer to 1728 a month. Is that fair? Correct. Yeah. Awesome. You can see why this is so painful to do this analysis, right? How can most people do this analysis without thinking through all this stuff? It's like ridiculously hard.
Starting point is 00:12:05 So then we have to figure out like what would happen if you sold this property, right? So that's what we're trying to do here. And that involves the sales expenses and then taxes if they apply. Taxes do not apply in your situation, almost certainly. They will apply if you hold the property for a few years, and that is factored into this from an investment standpoint. But they do not apply if you sell it immediately. So we have our brokerage fees. Here I've estimated 5.5% to sell the properties.
Starting point is 00:12:33 seem reasonable or would you want to see that bumped up a little bit? Some places each broker can charge as much as 3%. I would actually reduce that. So I still have my real estate license from when I used to do it full time. And that was eight or so years ago. I've kept it all this time. And it's what actually helped us do renovations on our current house. Okay. What would you reduce it to? We can do 3%. Buyer will pay. You'll pay a buyer agent at about 3% to sell this place. I've estimated closing cost in title insurance at about 1%. That might be a hair low in your area. It would be a hair high in my area here in Colorado.
Starting point is 00:13:10 But maybe it might up this to 1.2%. Yeah, it would be a little higher. Do you think even higher than that, or would you like those? Let's stick with that for now. Okay, great. So after you sell this property for $320,000 and pay off your mortgage balance, remaining balance of $175,000. And after you pay the buyer agent and other closing costs, you'd be left with $127,000, of which
Starting point is 00:13:34 $97,000 are a capital gain. Again, because this is less than $500,000 for a married couple that has lived in a property for two years, there will be no capital gains taxes or anything that do apply. But if for some reason that was to change or this number was to be higher, you could simply toggle this on, and it would default to putting the, to computing the long-term capital gains taxes. and I've defaulted this to the tax rate in Colorado. You can easily put it in the state tax rate there. Now I've got to think about what we assume for the alternative investment returns.
Starting point is 00:14:05 I've assumed a 10% long-term nominal stock market return with a dividend yield of 1.36%. Do you agree with these assumptions, or are you a little bit more conservative with your stock market assumption or a little bit more aggressive? No, we'd probably stay at the 10%. But normally when we do our projections, we, ignore things like Social Security and all that. So in terms of retirement and reaching five, like the 10% assumes we'll have more. Awesome. We had a lay from California come on the show and she wanted to assume five or, you know, three to five percent appreciation or something like that in her area, five to seven percent. Remember that, Mindy? And so everyone, everyone believes different
Starting point is 00:14:48 things and that's what they, that's what you got to, that's the point of this, right? You got to invest based on what you believe for these things. So, and by the way, I'll sneak, preview here. So we'll end up with a graph of what's going to happen with our cash flow, what's going to happen on our net worth. And I'll explain all the quirks on this once we get to the end output here. Okay, so let's talk about what we can do with the proceeds. So the first and most obvious use of the proceeds is to use it for the sale, the down payment on the next property. That's important because that will reduce the mortgage balance at what is likely to be a very expensive new mortgage, not quite 7.5%, but it'll be it'll be something there. What do
Starting point is 00:15:25 think mortgage rates are going to be right now? Maybe Mindy, that's a good question for you. What do you think is a good assumption? 30 year is 6.16%. 6.16%. Okay. And is this about the mortgage you'd want to get on a new house, Sean? Yeah, we'd be looking after the before or after the down payment. After the down payment. What would be the mortgage balance of the new home you'd assume? Yeah, it'd be around 360, I think is what we're looking at right now. Okay, so this is going to be a negative number 360. Okay. And we're going to have a 6.16.
Starting point is 00:15:55 percent, that's going to give us monthly P&I of 2,100. That would be if you didn't sell your house and didn't use the proceeds, you'd take on a $360,000 balance. But if you do use these proceeds, instead you're going to take on this amount, $232,000 mortgage, and that's going to reduce your payment to $1,400 from $2,200, which is a what, like $800 a month difference. That's the question, right? That's what bugs everybody here about this decision. So that we know we have that one. Okay.
Starting point is 00:16:23 And we'll model out how that's going to impact your finance. inches over the next couple years for sure next is going to be let's say you keep this thing as a rental what would this rent for be 25 2500 25 24 so that's close 20 2600 bucks um on there okay and then we've got our um pity payment here of 1728 this is just continuing what we've got right and i've got a vacancy allowance of 200 bucks here that's a maybe i'll put bump that up to 250 um 10% vacancy is high but that's a you know you're you're not a landlord right now so maybe the first year or two it's a little harder maybe that maybe that goes down in future years does that seem reasonable yes and i want to pause here just to i don't know if this is the best time in the the podcast to do this but
Starting point is 00:17:08 one of the other considerations that we have is we know in the next five years so short term will have roof, fence, and half, the other half of the windows, which if you add that all up, is around 20,000 that we anticipate within the next, like, five years. Okay, that's a great, this is a great time to bring that up, right? This is exactly where we're at, right? This is, this is it. So we have a, I'm saying 5% vacancy allowance. That 10% is way too high for vacancy allowance on this.
Starting point is 00:17:41 Your maintenance expenses will be about 200 bucks a month, which sound reasonable, but you're saying, hey, I'm going to have 20 grand in known CAPEX over the next five years. So let's just assume that that's going to be, let's just put that in here to plug it. And let's say that that number is, so that's going to be 5,000 a year, 4,000 a year here. So we're going to need to put $400,000, probably for the CAPX component. Yeah, on a monthly basis. It'll be $4,800 a year over the next four years. I'll be able to about 20 grand.
Starting point is 00:18:09 So that's a very conservative way to model in CAPX on this property based on what you just said here. Is that right? Yep. That's it. Awesome. Well, you pay the utilities in this property? Probably not. Okay, so we'll have zero utility.
Starting point is 00:18:21 So you're going to eke out a small amount of positive cash flow for the next couple of years, and then it will bump up later. My model does not allow us to easily plug in. There will be CAPEX at this point. I could build that in the future, but it does not do that today in this particular spreadsheet. Okay. So do we agree with these assumptions for the rental? Yeah, definitely. I'm actually glad to see that it,
Starting point is 00:18:43 cash flow is positive. I haven't actually done like the projecting out the the KAPX. So that's great. I would wonder if that would be reasonably conservative on this for the KAPX component. And I think these are these are reasonable on this end here. You might also, depending on how things go, see this grow. I don't know. I think that the rents have been compressed for the last couple of years. And I personally, this is an aggressive assumption. And I think a lot of people might disagree with it or might want to put in there. But I believe that rents are likely to grow pretty substantially in the next couple of years in many parts of the country because they've been depressed by a large inflow of new supply. That may not be true in your area. New supply and
Starting point is 00:19:26 multifamily construction, which is ceasing. So the next couple of years will not see as many new units come on the market. And therefore, I think there could be some rent growth in a lot of markets. But those are just little nuances to think about when we model this out. You may also have some utility expense if you're between tenants, for example, for any of those projects. Okay, let's talk about passive, the passive, so this is a DIY assumption. So this assumes that you will self-manage the property. And I had to make it its own case because property management is expensive. And I have property management here as a 10% of rents additional cost.
Starting point is 00:20:05 And if you were to hire this out with property management, you would be cash flow negative in this situation, right? Because we'd add in another, we'd take 10% of the rents out, and that would leave you with this number. Now, you also have to guess at what you think appreciation is going to look like for this place, both in home price, rent growth, and expense growth. I've plugged them at the historical average as a 3.4% for the Case Schiller index for this, which I think is a reasonable base case consumption. But again, our California guests believed that these were going to be in a 7% range for rent and home price appreciation. maybe that'll play out.
Starting point is 00:20:41 What would you want to see for these assumptions here? Yeah, I anticipate the appreciation. I'm really unsure on the rent growth and the expense growth. Home price appreciation, though, I would put closer like four, just like slightly higher than the average. Okay, before we look at how this all shakes out, Scott, I have a couple of comments. Sean, if you sell, your mortgage will be about $500 more than your current mortgage.
Starting point is 00:21:08 So that is a lot easier to stomach. If you don't sell, your mortgage will be $1,100 more than your current mortgage. And that could be a big difference, a big pill to swallow. Just a P&I. Yeah, that's just the P&I. Your known CAPEX leaves you with $4,700 a month. And as somebody who has had rental properties before, the only CAPEX that you can really count on is known, but I can guarantee you there's going to be more than that. So I'm concerned that
Starting point is 00:21:44 your positive is going to very quickly turn to negative. And every state is different. I know that Texas has significantly lower costs than my home state of Colorado, but you would only get the roof for that $20,000 that you're predicting. It'd be another $4,000 for the fence, another $10 to 15 for those windows. And I like 8% vacancy because that's a one month. gap between tenants and planning for vacancy allows you to to have this this expectation. If you get the next tenant right away or your tenant renews clearly, then you're making more. But I really like to run numbers conservatively just to make sure that it makes sense to rent the property.
Starting point is 00:22:32 I love your 3.75% mortgage, but based on what Scott is showing here, I'm really curious to see what those numbers are going to say. All right. We'll be charting out Sean's financial decisions, I guess, here in a few moments. Bear with us. Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening.
Starting point is 00:22:59 That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where your money is going. And more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't just to look backward. it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch. Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop. Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off
Starting point is 00:23:25 your Monarch subscription with the code pockets. What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focus on achieving, not just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place. So every decision actually moves the needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com for half off your first year. That's 50% off at monarch.com code pockets. You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast?
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Starting point is 00:26:25 So you say one number, Mindy says another. We'll come back and we'll tweak it and see how it impacts our result here. look at two things on this, right? One is, how is this decision going to affect the cash coming into your life, right? So you're going to have a lot less cash coming into your life every year if you don't sell the property and use the proceeds toward the new mortgage, right? It's an obvious assumption, it's an obvious conclusion, right? Because what we just said, this is like almost $1,200 more a month. Yeah, this is almost $1,200 more a month, well over $1,000 more a month than your current mortgage in terms of cash that you have to be.
Starting point is 00:27:01 pay out for your P&I alone, right? Which is the decision, right? You might have higher insurance or taxes at that point, but you'd have them matter what in the new decision on this. So that's a really important thing here. The other component is how, what's going to happen to your net worth, right? And these are often in conflict. This is the balance that we have to kind of think about in this analysis, right? And you're going to have more net worth, at least in the first couple of years, if you DIY landlord the property, than you are if you sell and use the property. proceeds towards the new home mortgage. So that's kind of the decision here. This is a really complicated analysis. This is an everyday decision people make, and it's got really deep
Starting point is 00:27:40 underlying assumptions into it. This is almost 50 lines of inputs in order to get to this output to help Sean make this decision, which is a very high stakes one for a lot of people. This again spits out two things, but I think they're important to the average person who's asking this question. They're important to Sean. One, which one's going to make me wealthy over time. And the second is, how does it can impact my cash flow, right? Cash flow in the near term is flexibility and freedom. Net worth is obviously the long-term goal for most folks in building wealth. And what we've got here is a remarkably close. Let's start with net worth. We've got a remarkably close set of outputs here from a net worth perspective. Okay. Now, what are we looking at on
Starting point is 00:28:21 this chart? We have four different cases. The first blue is we sell the property and invest passively in an index fund at 10%. The second is we're going to sell and use the proceeds towards the new home mortgage, which is a return of about 6% per year because we're not paying that 6% on that mortgage. By the way, this is not
Starting point is 00:28:40 factor in taxes on there, so this can get even more complicated than what's in the model here. The gray line is going to be our DIY landlord, and the yellow line is our passive landlord. Now let's notice something funky about the chart here. In the first couple of years, the first two years, you will
Starting point is 00:28:57 will have more wealth if you keep the property as a rental than if you sell it. And the reason for this is because capital gains taxes do not apply to most people who have lived in this property for those two years, right? So I've modeled in where, hey, you're not going to be able to net those proceeds for up to the beginning of year three, if, you know, the very first day of year three in there, if you do not sell the property and keep it for a year or two. I think that that's really important here because in a lot of close models like this one, right, which is what millions, tens of millions Americans are dealing with right now, the keep it for a year decision can be a pretty reasonable one, right, in that first little bit,
Starting point is 00:29:40 because you can just take a look at this and kind of wait and see, and you still have that tax advantage, which is a section 121, is that right, Mnese 211 exclusion, where you can exclude capital gains taxes. When that goes away, all of a sudden, selling and using the proceeds towards a new home or selling and passively investing in the index fund begin to jump ahead for a little bit. Then in this case, with the assumptions that we believe, selling and investing in the index fund, take off under the set of assumptions that we just said that we believe in the model here. We'd probably have to bump up our appreciation or rent estimates in this particular case in order to keep. this property on a long-term basis. So that's what the net worth estimate is telling us. Right. The second really important consideration is going to be our cash flow, right? And this is a
Starting point is 00:30:34 wild, this is a really, this is so important that I felt I had to model it separately, even though many people claim to care about net worth. You know, if you, if you do not, if you, if you use the proceeds for the new mortgage, you're going to have a difference of like what, what is that, $6,000 more dollars hitting your bank account after, tax every year for a number of years here, it's going to be a huge gap. You're going to feel way less well off, way less flexible if you invest in the alternatives. And I think that's important because if it's close, like this one is, that's a heavy consideration towards prepaying the mortgage. Yeah, there's a net worth difference, but it's not that big after 10 years
Starting point is 00:31:16 in this particular model on this basis. And this may, for many people, trump. the analysis about what's going to happen to my net worth over time. Go ahead, Mindy, you know, you want to react here. I just thought of something. Right now, we are in more of a buyer's market than a seller's market in much of the United States. So I'm wondering if since you have these known KAPX issues coming up in the next five years, are you going to have to give a credit at closing when you sell this house? We're not likely.
Starting point is 00:31:50 We've actually explored like a cash. purchase, like even taking a reduced amount. One of the things that we've noticed is when the markets are shifting, sometimes the quick close cash purchases are higher than after fees and everything that you would get if you went enlisted directly. Let's take that out of the purchase price. That's the simplest way to do this. So what do we think of this thing that's going to sell for in a worst case scenario?
Starting point is 00:32:21 What's a more conservative estimate? Worst case scenario, we'd probably be looking at $300,000 or $300,000 sell instead of $320. Okay. This is going to have an interesting output, right, when we do this. This is going to give us more weight. Not that, not that interesting here. It would give us more weight, a little bit more weight, typically towards keeping the property. But in this case, it's not really making a big difference.
Starting point is 00:32:46 Where the model really begins to talk about the value of doing this, is when there's a very high amount of leverage at a low interest rate. So if this is at three, if this was at like 3.75% and we were saying we're only going to get like 205 from this sale and we're really going to net like 5,000 or maybe, maybe, but they'll do a little bit more here like 220 because of the after the sale prices. You have 22,000. Yep. Only as good as the inputs here. So, you know, in this case, you only net like 33 grand on the sale. Now all of a sudden we're going to have a really strong case for keeping the property overselling it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:24 Because that leverage is going to be, that leverage and that low interest rate is going to make such a big difference. That's the, that's the fun part about modeling this all out is there's so many different scenarios. And we'll probably follow up this up with a couple of like, here's a high cost of living, high leverage property and low leverage kind of play around with those. And we'll see a lot of pretty staggering differences. In many cases, the decision's very obvious.
Starting point is 00:33:48 yours is so great because it's not obvious. Yours is so great in the sense of a case study because it's so close. And I think we knew it would be close coming in. And that's why you wanted help with the decision here. Yeah. One of the things that this doesn't take into account is if you look at the cash flow chart, right, we said there's a $6,000 difference annually. And that was the case at 320, right, with the $320 sale price.
Starting point is 00:34:13 Yeah. So let's go back to that, right? In terms of our lifestyle and what that looks like, the difference of that, I guess, is only roughly 500, 500 a month. But there's certain benefits of, at that point in time, it's, we're looking at new builds in particular for our situation. So it would be new home, new neighborhood, nicer school. there's kind of these sort of soft benefits that aren't reflected that for $500 a month difference. Sorry, there's a point of confusion I think here then. Right.
Starting point is 00:34:53 This is, if you buy the new home, your mortgage P&I will go up by $1,800, I'm sorry, by $1,200, I'm sorry, by $1,300, right? I'll go from $915 to $21.96. So that will take out $12 to $15,000 plus whatever the incremental is from the taxes and insurance. It will be more expensive no matter what and it will be worth it. That's something you want to buy for your life. The question that we're answering with this spreadsheet is if you take this $127,000 and pay down this mortgage aggressively, you'll have an incremental $800. What is this?
Starting point is 00:35:32 $600, $800 and $800 that you'll be saving each month. over there and there's a little bit of an adjustment for um over the the zero mark here that's what that's what we're seeing here on this yeah so maybe i didn't i didn't quite word that uh correctly then so the the eight hundred dollars i guess instead of the 500 what i'm saying is the difference in that i don't think outweighs the lifestyle change that would occur if we were to sell the home i guess we're making the assumption right that we we if we kept it as a rental we would still get the new home as well. So this is saying what should we do, you're going to get the new home, right? That's almost, that's almost like irrelevant in part to the analysis. We're not
Starting point is 00:36:16 questioning that decision. We're saying, what do we do with the old home? Yeah, okay. Right. The old home, do we keep it or do we apply it to the new mortgage, right? And so incrementally, so if you keep the old home and you keep it as a rental, a passive rental, you're going to generate like a couple grand maybe with our base case assumptions in cash flow. If you, if you, have a property manager, you're going to have negative cash flow. If you invest in the index fund, the $127,000 in an index fund, you're going to generate like two or three grand in cash flow from the dividends. And if you prepay the mortgage, you're going to save $9,400 a year that you can spend over the zero mark, right, on this. Like, that's all going to be savings to you. It's going to
Starting point is 00:37:01 be an incremental $6,000, over what you'd have coming into your life from the $0.000.00,000. You're going to have coming into your life from dividends from stocks, for example, if you were to prepay the mortgage by that amount. Is that making sense? Yeah, yeah, I appreciate the clarity on that. I can see why that's confusing, yeah, because it's not it's not debating whether you should buy the new home or not. It's debating what do we do with the old home? Because many people need to move, right? It's like, it's not like, oh, financial decision to move. It's no, my kids are about to go to school and I'm moving into the good school district. Or I got a new job. My parents got sick and I need to move home back, you know, back to where I grew up on that or whatever it is,
Starting point is 00:37:37 right? Like that's the decision tens of millions people are grappling with. And then what do I do with the old one? Right. Because no, most people don't want to move right now. That's why we have so few transaction volume. It's because people are in your situation. You got this 3.75% mortgage. That's a really powerful incentive to stay. And this is a real killer to switch to. But life happens. Life goes on. We must move. We must move, go to the next place, many of us here in America. And this decision now becomes very difficult because the property is worth more on average to the current owner than it is to the new buyer because the mortgage is so low. And that's a fundamental problem that's that's trapping the market right now.
Starting point is 00:38:16 So Scott, based on all of this, what would you recommend Sean do with this property? My bias, I think I think that the reason I built this way is because if it's close, take the proceeds and pay off the new mortgage, right? And yeah, you'll be a little less well. wealthy after 10 years on that, but you'll have all this flexibility in the meantime that I think is so powerful for a lot of folks, so many options that that brings in. And I think that that's what I would probably do in this particular situation. This would be a sell it and use the proceeds to pay off the mortgage on there or to sell it and invest in the index funds, but I'd rank them and sell and prepay and invest in the next fund. What would you do, Mindy?
Starting point is 00:38:58 sell because of the cash flow, the projected cash flow, if you scroll up to the top, is $47 a month. And in my very long time as the community manager for bigger pockets, my main job was to be in the forums. And I would see people comment about how they were cash flow negative. Cash flow. Like I was, I projected and I got $100 a month in cash flow and I thought this was going to be amazing. And then I had this one repair that I hadn't accounted for, and it wiped out my cash flow for years. I would say sell. Even with this $47 in positive cash flow, that would be my recommendation.
Starting point is 00:39:41 Sean, what do you think about what we're saying? I agree with you, Mindy, in that I think it's going to be a lot closer than even in the analysis that we did, which obviously this is like way more thorough than what we were doing. we were doing more napkin math for ours but that being so close and then the differences in cash flow you know i think our risk profile in those first three years uh because of that difference in cash flow uh yeah it's your one big situation away from uh things sort of spiraling downward so i think that In this case, it's a pretty good lean towards Zell, unless you have really high hopes for your appreciation in this particular case. Yeah, we didn't even touch on this.
Starting point is 00:40:35 But, yeah, income-wise, probably in the next five years, the 130 should be in the low twos just for mine. And we don't know what my spouse is going to do after our kids are in school more full-time. So yeah, we hopefully I could be back in a couple of years and we'll have a completely different set of questions to go over. Yeah, that's the big, that's the big one to go after I think there is, is, I think that would be a great kind of next step here is, hey, we can really do whatever we want with the house. Doesn't really matter. Kind of slightly lean towards maybe selling it based on these assumptions. But really what's going to make a difference for us is going to be the income front. How can I, how can we set things up so that I have a great shot at that.
Starting point is 00:41:25 200k income in the next couple of years. And what do you want to start thinking about once the kiddos are in school in terms of that? What is what is what is what is it happy and good situation look like? That will be a million or two to two million dollar discussion or analysis in your household compared to the decision we talked about today, which I think is surprising actually I actually was thinking would be a little higher stakes when I set out for the model today on your on your particular decision. Yeah, I appreciate it. Thank you guys so much for the for the time. It's that's been great. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:41:56 John, thank you so much for sharing your numbers with us. We really appreciate it. And we will talk to you soon. And when you have a big change in your situation, please reach back out. Yeah, definitely. We'll do. Thank you guys. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:10 And thank you so much. We'll talk to you soon. Bye-bye. Scott, I think this was a super fun episode. And I think this question of should I sell or keep my house is something that truly is weighing on many of our listeners. So I super appreciate you taking the time to make this. really, really detailed spreadsheet. What did you think of the episode? I knew it would be close. I didn't know it would be that close in the discussion. And I think that, you know, the power of the
Starting point is 00:42:39 tool in this particular case is showing how close the decision really is and how it's not really a decision, right? Some people perseverate over these things because they think they're high-stakes decisions, and they are. But if you can model it out and be like, well, this job pays 120 and has a little more upside than this one at 125, who knows how that, like, those decisions actually aren't that high stakes in the end. And there are actually other things, I think, in Sean's financial journey that are going to be more important, like his career choices, how they think about spending, and the house that they purchase in the future and what type of housing arrangement they live there in the first place that are going to be more consequential than this. The,
Starting point is 00:43:19 But that's a, but don't take that to mean that for many Americans, this isn't an enormous choice that they're at risk of making a wrong decision on that could be where that could make them better or worse off by hundreds of thousands of dollars. And so I'll preview a couple of points. We'll do another episode, I'm sure, in the future on this in more detail. But if you are highly leveraged, if you have a very low interest rate mortgage, it's like 3%, and you have a high amount of leverage. So let's say your house is worth 350 and your mortgage is $3.25. You're almost certainly going to be way wealthier in 20 years in a case like Sean's today by keeping the property. Right now all that depends on your cash flow or rent assumptions.
Starting point is 00:44:04 But that's generally a rule there because that properties were so much more to you than anybody else. And that low interest rate and that high leverage should compound really nicely over time. On the flip side, if you're in a very high cost living area and you have like eight or $900,000 house with like three or $400,000 mortgage, which is a lot of people as well in that type of situation. The math for selling the property and getting out of it is overwhelmingly, is overwhelming. The challenge for those people is typically, do I then take those proceeds and invest them
Starting point is 00:44:37 in the stock market or take them and apply them to my next mortgage, which is often also in a high-cost living environment? And that one's really interesting because you make a lot of money. more wealth if you invest the money in the stock market. But some of these people, that's six or $700,000 can make like a five or $6,000 a month difference in their mortgage payment on the new property, which is like that's almost like an American household income alone will need to be earned to generate just the P&I difference on that decision. So that's what this tool comes really helpful is these are really high stakes decisions. And sometimes there's a tradeoff.
Starting point is 00:45:17 really a right answer in it. And I think that the two graphs will hopefully show those tradeoffs reasonably well. And I like to think, like, if it's close on one and a blowout on the other, then it's easy, right? Then you go with that one. And that's what we had today. Right. It was close in the net worth one and it was a blowout way, he was way better off from a cash flow perspective from the mortgage position. And that made the decision relatively easy for me as an outsider to kind of say like, that would be my bias. Yeah. You said you knew it would be close. And But Scott, for many people, this decision isn't close. And the best way to determine that is to run the numbers.
Starting point is 00:45:53 So if you find yourself in this same position as Sean is struggling with these, should I keep my house or should I sell my house, go download Scott's spreadsheet at BiggerPockets.com slash sell or keep. And sell or keep is all one word. And we, of course, will link to it in the show notes as well. All right, Scott, I had a great time talking real estate today with you, but it's time to go. Should we get out of here? Let's do it.
Starting point is 00:46:17 That wraps up this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. He is Scott Trench. I am Indy Jensen saying farewell, Gazelle.

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