BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 789: Seeing Greene: Where to Find Deals in 2023 and How to Spend $100K
Episode Date: July 9, 2023Real estate deals are hard to come by in 2023. But, there are still a few overlooked rental markets that most investors aren’t aware of. In times like this, with investors ready to pounce on almost ...any property and other assets vastly underperforming real estate, you’ll need to think differently if you want to get ahead. Long gone are the days of buying any property in any market and expecting instant cash flow. Now, you’ve got to think like an expert investor and start Seeing Greene! David is back with another Seeing Greene episode as we touch on how investors can find deals in 2023, which markets are worth looking into, why low cash flow isn’t such a bad thing, and how to decide between buying a single-family or a multifamily rental. We’ve also got some trickier-than-usual questions this time, as a seventeen-year-old wants to know where he should invest a $100K inheritance. We’ll also get into the nitty gritty of paying off loans vs. refinancing, where to find distressed properties, and what to do when natural disasters threaten your rental business. Want to ask David a question? If so, submit your question here so David can answer it on the next episode of Seeing Greene. Hop on the BiggerPockets forums and ask other investors their take, or follow David on Instagram to see when he’s going live so you can hop on a live Q&A and get your question answered on the spot! In This Episode We Cover: Emerging real estate markets that most investors overlook Low cash flow and whether a rental is worth buying if it only profits a few hundred dollars a month How to spend a $100K inheritance and why real estate ISN’T the best choice BRRRR deals and how to find distressed properties that have huge equity potential Hard and private money loans, interest-only payments, and when to pay off your debt Single-family homes vs. multifamily and which makes the most money with the lowest down payment Natural disasters and whether or not it’s worth it to invest in dangerous areas And So Much More! Links from the Show Find an Agent Find a Lender BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Forums BiggerPockets Pro Membership BiggerPockets Bookstore BiggerPockets Bootcamps BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Merch BPCON2023 Listen to All Your Favorite BiggerPockets Podcasts in One Place Learn About Real Estate, The Housing Market, and Money Management with The BiggerPockets Podcasts Get More Deals Done with The BiggerPockets Investing Tools Find a BiggerPockets Real Estate Meetup in Your Area David's BiggerPockets Profile David's Instagram David’s YouTube Channel Work with David Try the BiggerPockets Rent Estimator on Your Next Property Seeing Greene Episode 762 Enter to Win a FREE Copy of David's New Book, "Pillars of Wealth" Books Mentioned in the Show Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat by David Greene Set for Life by Scott Trench Click here to listen to the full episode: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-789 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show, 7, 8, 9.
You mentioned that you're at a disadvantage in some ways, and that's true, but you're at a huge advantage in some other ways.
There's a lot of other people that are under that belief that they think I'm just going to go to college for four years.
I'm going to get a great job with great benefits, and I'm not going to have to push myself very hard,
and they end up racking up a lot of student debt, getting out of college, not getting a great job they love.
They do have to work hard. Life is not what they thought, and they become very bitter and unhappy.
What's going on, everyone? This is David Green, your host of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate Podcast.
As you already know, we are the biggest, the best, and the baddest real estate podcast in the world here today with a Seen Green Edition for you.
In these Seeing Green Editions, I'd say questions from you are a listener base and answer them for everyone to hear so we can all share the knowledge, the wealth, and hopefully the success of successful real estate investing.
And today's show is awesome. We get into what to do when you can't find any good deal.
Anybody have that resonate with them? Is that unfamiliar? Someone needs out of Florida and where should they buy? This is a really good question where we get into how to identify the next emerging market. If a hard money loan or a private money loan should be extended and if so, how the deal should be structured, what to do when your hard money loan is coming due. Plus a story from a 17-year-old that recently lost his parents is living with his grandparents, has a hundred grand coming and wants to know what the best way to set his life up for future.
success would be all that and more in today's seeing green. All right, before we get to our first
question, everybody, I've got a quick tip just for you. Remember, there are lots of ways that you
can get information from real estate and lots of bigger pockets episodes you can listen to,
but only the most recent ones have data that is relevant to today's changing market conditions.
Rates are bouncing up and now coming back down. Every time rates go down, the markets get hot.
Every time they go up, they slow down a little bit. People are moving from state to state and different
laws are changing all the time. What does that mean for you? The market that you're investing in
now is very different than it was even a month ago. And if you're listening to out-of-date information
that isn't relevant, it won't be as helpful to you. So make sure you catch all of the new and
recent episodes that we're putting out so you can stay up to date with the current,
most relevant information to help you build wealth through real estate. Most investors spend more
time chasing deals than reviewing their insurance. But a quick coverage check can be fast,
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A lot of property managers think their job is answering tenant emails and coordinating repairs.
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The job of a property manager is protecting and growing your operating income
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And that comes down to three numbers, occupancy, delinquency, and net promoter score.
If those numbers slip, your income slips and your trust slips too.
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They focus on activity, not outcomes.
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Go to mind.com slash show me to see how mine performs and get a month of management for free.
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hire one that manages your investment like an investment.
Did you know your house gets bored when you leave?
I can't actually prove that,
but it probably misses out on the action,
the footsteps, the late night fridge raids.
Yeah, when you're gone,
your place is basically on unpaid leave.
It's sitting there in the dark thinking,
I could be contributing right now.
Your side room wants a side hustle.
Even your Wi-Fi is like,
we could be networking.
You're on vacation, spending money like it's a sport while your staircase at home is fully capable of sending your income upwards.
Here's the twist.
You can go on a trip and actually earn money.
Airbnb makes that possible with the co-host network.
If you're away for a while or have a secondary property, you can hire a vetted local co-host with real hosting experience to handle it all.
A co-host can handle guest communications, it can manage reservations and keep things running smoothly so you don't have to.
to check your phone between beach days. That means less stress and more time enjoying your trip.
You can relax, knowing guests are taken care of and your place is in good hands. You travel,
your house works. Everyone wins. If you're ready to host but could use some help, find a co-host
at Airbnb.com slash host. All right, thanks for being here. Let's get to our first question.
Hi, David. My name is Tamara Johnson, and my husband and I are looking to purchase our first property.
We live in Frederick, Maryland, which is about one hour outside of D.C., and we've been working with
the realtor now for about six months. We found some really nice properties, potential rental properties.
But the problem is the earning potential monthly is really hasn't been too great. The most we've seen,
it's about 100 to a little less than 300 per month. And we have about $50,000 that we've set aside in cash assets.
And we were intended to use that to put down 20%.
We have some other resources if we need to put down more than the 50,000 to reach that 20% marker.
But we're just wondering, should we be putting so much of our cash assets into a property that we may not have the potential of earning much monthly?
We also know that we can get greater return if we purchase a foreclosure or at an auction.
But as first time investors, is it really realistic for us to consider those venues, understanding that those are generally dominated by experienced investors with much larger portfolios?
So we're just trying to understand what's realistic.
Is our standard too high?
And should we just wait to invest?
I know it's hard to kind of nail down when the best property comes along, but we're just wondering,
$1 to $200 is that realistic right now for the interest rates and the housing market.
Any advice that you have would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Hey, thank you for this, Tamara.
You articulated your position and your challenges very well.
So let's get down to answering this question.
Unfortunately, the position you and your husband are in is somewhat par for the course right now.
We have too much demand, not enough supply.
A lot of people want to be investing in real estate.
right now, same reasons that you do. Investors are going hard after assets. People that have seen
their rent go up are going hard after assets. Hedge funds and private equity are going hard after
real estate assets. There's a lot of competition. So even though rates have gone up,
all the people that are calling for the crash have been wrong so far. We haven't seen a crash
because there's still more demand than supply. What that means is it's harder for investors to
make a deal work. Now, if you're finding something that's cash flowing $100 to $300 a month,
month, that's actually pretty good. I mean, a lot of the clients that I'm seeing,
they aren't finding cash flow at all. Everybody's looking really hard to find anything that
comes out positive. And when they do, it's usually not the numbers that we saw four or five years
ago. When interest rates were really low, you were able to find more cash flow. Now, you also said
something I thought was very insightful. You said, should we adjust our expectations or are our
expectations too high? This is a wise way of looking at this situation because we're
when we are deciding if we want to move on a deal.
We're usually comparing it to the other deals that we've seen
and we're gauging is this better or worse than the average that I come across
or that the majority of the deals I see.
Well, if you're used to seeing $500 or $600 a month in cash flow
and now you're seeing $200 or $300 a month in cash flow,
it can feel like it's not a good deal.
You shouldn't buy the property.
But if you're comparing that to no cash flow or even losing money,
$200 or $300 a month starts to look pretty good.
it all comes down to what other options you have to put that money into.
So my question to you is, are there other assets outside of real estate that you can get a better cash on cash return for that 50 grand?
And if so, do those other alternatives still look better when you include long-term paydown of the loan, long-term appreciation, potential for rising rates, tax benefits of real estate?
really instead of comparing deals to what you could get yesterday, you have to compare deals to what you can get today.
Now, you also mentioned should you wait for a foreclosure, should you buy an auction?
If you're buying an auction, you usually need to have cash.
So you're not going to buy properties in the DC area with $50,000.
Even if you have more, you'd have to have enough money to pay cash for those.
Then you're not going to get an inspection contingency.
You're not going to get clean title.
You're just going to have to hope that there's no problems with the problem.
property, definitely not a thing that you want to get into as a beginner. When you add all this
information together, it's why I've been telling so many people, now's a great market, it's a
house hack. You can get rid of your housing expense. You can get into better properties with less
money down and you're not really giving up a lot of cash flow because you weren't going to find
it anyways. So if you can reduce your housing expense, that's better than cash flow and just buy
something that can turn into rental property in a year when you move out when rents have gone up.
That's the strategy that's solid. I don't know if you and your husband are willing to do
that, but if you are, I would strongly look into it. And if you're not, I would advise you to look
for properties that are going to appreciate over the long term more than alternatives. Look, we all want
cash flow. And if we can get it, go for it. But if you can't get it, try to hedge that bet by
getting a property that doesn't cash flow great, but rents are likely to go up every year more than other
properties or the value is likely to go up more every year than other properties. Put more emphasis on
the location when you can't find cash flow to make up for the cash flow that you're missing out in the
Sorry that you're in this position, but hey, it doesn't sound so bad if you're still able to find something that cash flows between $100 and $300 a month.
A lot of people can't even find that.
All right, our next question comes from Jeff in Denver.
Hey, David, I've spent the past four months reading several real estate investing books like Set for Life by Scott Trench and Burr by you, David Green.
Now that I have some knowledge under my belt, I'm looking to take action upon the things I've learned to get some hands-on experience.
I'm looking for some advice on where to get started and what you would recommend for my situation and the thought process on how to get started.
I've got a pretty good and reliable job
in cybersecurity that I've been successful at.
I've had one promotion every year in the past three years
and now I'm looking to pivot that momentum I have going in my career
into real estate investing.
I've got about $100,000 in reserves
and I'm ready to hit the ground running
to build long-term sustainable wealth.
What I would like to do is purchase distressed properties
and burr them to start off with a strong equity position
to recover my invested capital to improve the velocity of my money.
Also, instead of long-term rent as the second R in Burr,
I want to implement short-term rentals
with a property manager once I have rehab to increase cash flow.
Yeah, that's still a bur.
It's just a bur of a short-term rental.
What you're describing sometimes we call a Burr-Stur or an Airbnb Burr.
There's a couple of cute ways that people refer to this.
But it's still the Burr method.
You're just renting it out as a short-term rental instead of a long-term rental.
Am I thinking about things the right way?
Would you be taking a different approach if you're in my position?
And do you have any tips or tricks for how I can start to find good burr deals?
I've had a tough time meeting wholesalers and finding good deals.
So at this point I'm considering starting a direct mail cam,
pain so that I can control my own deals in a competitive market. I appreciate everything you've done
and continue to do for the community. Thanks very much, David. All right, thank you for the question,
Jeff. I'm going to start with the bad news and then we're going to move into the good. As you guys are
listening to this, BiggerPockets members, are you noticing similar patterns are coming up with every question?
You're not alone. Everyone's got, I'm having a hard time finding deals. I'm having a hard time finding
things that pencil out. I want financial freedom. I want to build long term wealth from real estate,
but, but I'm having a hard time finding deals.
Okay, there's a lot of buts around this problem.
And if you're having a hard time finding deals, you're not alone.
Our last question came from Tamara who's having a hard time finding deals.
It's hard to find deals.
And that's why I've been explaining.
It's because there's more buyers than there are sellers right now.
We can get into that in a different episode or a different question perhaps on why that's
the case, but that's the case.
So don't feel alone if you're in this position.
session. The best thing we can all do is just adjust our expectations. If you thought you were going
to buy three houses and retire, stop thinking that. If you thought you're not supposed to have
a W-2 job and work is for the dumb. Stop thinking that. Be grateful that we have jobs. Okay,
it's good to have work right now. If you want to add massive amounts of equity to every deal,
you may not be able to do that like you once could when there was less competition for these
properties. The reason you're having a hard time finding a wholesaler or finding easy access to
these kinds of deals is because other investors have jumped your spot and they're getting access to that
wholesaler before you do starting a direct mail campaign is a thing that can be done but if you haven't
done this before jeff i just want to let you know those wholesalers that you're having a hard time
getting in touch with are already doing that there are a lot of people that are already doing that
it's not a guarantee that you're going to control your own deal flow just by sending out letters this was a very
popular thing seven years ago, eight years ago when hardly anybody was doing it.
Tons of people are doing it.
There are franchises like we buy ugly houses that are out there teaching people how to send
letters.
In fact, there's so many people sending letters that there are now companies that will write
your letters for you and have made profit themselves by selling their services to people
like you that want to write letters.
That's how many people are sending direct mail to these properties.
Now, I don't want to discourage you because I think you're doing the right thing.
I do want to adjust expectations.
We are routinely going to see the same questions.
is popping up the same problems.
I'm having a hard time finding deals.
It's probably not going to change anytime soon.
The word is out.
Real estate investing is awesome.
Everybody knows now.
That's great for us that are listening to this.
It's also not great for us that are listening to this because now everybody else is
listening to this too.
So what can you do when you're looking for a burr?
First off, let's talk about some expectations that can be reduced.
You do not need to get a 100% of your capital out of a deal in order to do it.
That is a home run.
burr, it's okay to get singles, doubles, and triples. Those are still better than striking out.
So if you're one of those people that thinks you have to get 100% of your capital out of a deal,
don't. You don't have to think that way. As long as you leave less money in the deal than you would
have if you put 20% down and did your rehab, you're still coming out on top if you burr.
Second, everybody focuses on buying equity. In my 10 ways that you make money in real estate framework,
buying equity is getting the property at a really good price. And people forget.
about forcing equity, which is value at. You're going to have to see an angle in homes that
other people miss. You're going to have to find square footage that other people aren't seeing.
You're going to have a vision for that property that other investors are missing.
So when you're looking at properties, look for ways to add square footage or what I call
forcing cash flow, which is adding additional units that can then be rented out. Many deals
don't work in their current form. But if you converted square footage into a second unit and added
another $1,800 a month in rent, the deal would pencil out really good. So learn to look at real
estate through different goggles, like seeing green for lack of a better phrase. You've got to see
the potential in real estate and how it could be used as an investment property rather than
looking at its current condition and just trying to get it at a great price. Now once you've looked
at ways to force equity, now you can look into buying equity and getting it at a better price.
You combine all those together and those deals that look like they're not that great. Start to look
good if you've won in several different areas. I hope that helps, but just remember if it's hard,
it's normal. It should be hard right now. It's going to be hard right now. That doesn't mean you
shouldn't do it. All right. Our next video comes from Simon Garcia in Florida. Hey, David. My name's
Simon Garcia. I'm 17 and I'm in high school right now. I live with my grandparents and my parents
passed away when I was 13 and I live with my little brother and my little sister. Ever since then,
and pretty much the beginning of COVID, I've been trying to find ways on how I could
make a lot of money. I want to be super rich, man, super freaking rich. But I feel like my path would be
harder than most because I'm kind of in a difficult situation. However, me, my brother and my sister,
each of us received $100,000 as a donation from a organization that my parents used to work for.
And we have some leftover money from my dad's farm that he sold and whatnot. And I just,
I'm asking for some guidance, man. I really want to get started on real estate. I've been starting to build
some credit, you know, I became an authorized user in my grandparents' cards, open this little bank
account on this app called Steb. And I really want to get started into real estate, man. I was thinking
about once I get out of high school, I could pick up a salesperson job and make some good money,
working out of a dealership off commission and whatnot, but I don't really want to work that my whole
life. That being said, the $100,000 I have access to once I turn 18. I live in this city called
Weston, Weston, Florida, and this house is our expensive, man. I lived here before when my parents
were still around, but we're fortunate to still be living here because I live off of Social Security
with my grandparents, right? Both of them are retired, pretty old, and I'm going to get a job soon,
you know what I'm saying, but it's pretty hard to balance all of that because I have to
take care of my siblings, my grandparents, and I have to focus on myself as well at school.
But I really want to do real estate, man. Picked up your bird book and all that, and I've been reading up
I just got it like a week or two ago.
And I was just curious on, what do you think I could do with those $100,000 once I get out
of high school?
I know as of right now, the real estate market is going down quite a bit.
And I think by the time I'm 18, it'll be a very good time to get in.
Very, very, very good time to get.
But in this city that I live in, I don't really think I can do much.
However, I'm very willing to move wherever.
Honestly, like I had some thoughts about going to Tennessee.
or whatnot, cheap, very cheap, real estate market, maybe going up north in northern Florida
and see if I could start there and move, like, start a new life and start making money there
and whatnot. But I'm just very, I just want some guidance and some consolation on how I could make
some money, you know? Yeah, man, that's it. Thank you for your time if you watch this video,
man. All right, Simon. Thank you very much for that. First off, condolences about your parents.
I'm very sorry to hear that happened. It sounded like it was probably something sudden. You're now
living with your grandparents and you're not in an incredibly strong financial position.
It sounds like they don't have a lot of money. It sounds like you don't have people in your family
around you at least that were very good with money. So your heart's in the right place.
You want to do the right thing, but your head is lacking direction. So you're reaching out.
I think that was the right call. So it's very good to meet you. And thank you for doing that.
Let me describe a few of the concerns I have. And then I'm going to tell you about some of the
advantages you have in your situation. The first is I can tell the,
there's some urgency in your voice about this $100,000 you're going to get when you turn 18
and you got to make something happen with it right now, that is a very normal thing to be thinking
when you're a teenager, that what you're, you've got 17 years of experience to look back on,
which is a very compressed timeframe, but to you, that doesn't feel compressed at all.
This is your entire life.
When you become 50, 60 years old, you start to realize that 10, 15 years is actually not that
much time, whereas for you, 15 years is almost your entire life.
span. So you're going to have a sense of urgency that isn't necessarily real or something you have to have.
You don't have to invest $100,000 right away. You don't have to try to time the market to get in and get really, really, really rich right off the bat.
In fact, you might not even want to be really rich. You probably want something else. You probably want security so you can take care of your siblings.
You probably want some significance because you feel like it's on you to make an entire life for your whole family.
That's got to be a very painful and pressure-filled place to be stuck in, especially at your age.
It's great you got some money coming in.
I'm going to strongly advise you to not go try to spend that money right away,
to not jump into real estate investing at this age and just hope that you can make it happen.
It's okay to sit on that money for a long time.
It's okay to put it in an account and pretend like you don't even have it.
In fact, I'd rather you did that.
I'd rather you pretend like you don't have 100 grand, that you're broke.
and you go work a job and learn some skills as if you're broke.
Now let me tell you why I think that's the best move for you to do,
because I told you you got some good things working for you.
You mentioned that you're at a disadvantage in some ways, and that's true,
but you're at a huge advantage in some other ways,
and it's that you don't have a safety net.
You're not comfortable.
You don't have mom and dad or other people planning a path for you
that you think you just got to follow along, fat, dumb, and happy,
and you're going to end up in Richville.
There's a lot of other people that are under that belief that they think I'm just going to go to college for four years.
I'm going to get a degree.
I'm going to get a great job with great benefits that's fulfilling.
And I'm not going to have to push myself very hard.
And they end up racking up a lot of student debt getting out of college, not getting a great job they love.
They do have to work hard.
Life is not what they thought and they become very bitter and unhappy.
And sometimes they go try to have kids to make themselves feel better or get in a relationship that's not right for them to make themselves feel
better and at least even more bitterness. And then that can lead to drug abuse and alcohol abuse
and other problems that just compound when we have the wrong expectations for our life.
It is much healthier, in my opinion, to look at life like a competition between you and all the
other people that also want to be rich, between you and all the other people that also want
that you want between you and all your coworkers. And your goal every day is to go outwork every
coworker you have and to learn as much as you can about that industry as you can in that day.
I got this mentality from playing sports. So when I would go to basketball practice, every practice
was an opportunity to get better and I was only going to get one shot at that day. I had to learn
everything I could from my coach or the scrimmage or my teammates or my competition, whatever life
had to teach me. I had to learn everything I could in that one day because tomorrow was going to be a
different day and it was not going to have the same lessons for me that that day had. And I went after
it with a sense of urgency. I went after it like I don't want to waste anything. I want to get all of it.
And then I built on that from one day to the next. Now I took that attitude into the jobs that I would work.
I got a job as a waiter and I worked my tail off and I learned everything I could every single day.
And I slowly built more knowledge, more skill, more competency, built more trust with my employer,
started to get raises, started to get promotions, started to get better sections, eventually
worked that into going at a better restaurant, started the process over. I was making four or five
times as much money as the other kids that were my age because of the approach I took to work.
You have that same advantage because like me, I didn't have anyone showing me the way. I didn't have
anyone laying a path out for me. I had to go figure that path out on my own and I had a sense of
urgency. I was hungry. You have that same hunger. I want to see you using it. Don't fall for I want to make
a bunch of money day trading. I want to make a bunch of money trading in crypto. I want to be
smarter than the market. Everyone's trying to outsmart the market at your age. Take the path less
traveled. Say, I want to outwork the market. I want to outwork my competition. I want to be more
humble than the other people that are trying to get the same job I'm trying to get.
Bust your butt every day doing the best job you can and the opportunities that you get and then
look for new ways to do the same thing. You need to become addicted to hard work. In the book
I wrote that's going to be coming out later this year called Pillars of Wealth,
I talk about falling in love with the process of becoming great.
There is an actual method to that.
There is a rhythm to that.
Like learning skills and becoming great is a pattern that can be predicted and then executed.
And you've got to fall in love with that.
And so many people don't because they don't like hard work.
They think if you're working hard, you're doing something wrong.
They listen to podcasts like this because they think, oh, I want to work in real estate so they
don't have to work hard.
then they lose to the people going after the same assets who are working hard to get him.
So the most important thing for you, Simon, right now is to decide what kind of a man you want to be.
Do you want to be a kind of man that works harder than other people, that is more humble than other people,
that stays more focused than other people, that when he doesn't want to get up at 5.30,
when his alarm clock goes on, you think about your little brother, your little sister, how they need you
and they can't do it in an example you're setting for them?
And do you want to take that uphill climb or do you want to sleep in until 10 o'clock, act like
nobody's watching, I try to look for shortcuts. This is a pivotal moment in your life, my man.
The decisions you make right now are going to have a big impact on the quality of life that you have
for the rest of your time as well as your siblings and you're vulnerable. You just lost your
parents. You don't have people looking out for you the same ways you normally would, so you've got to be
extra, extra careful. Now, I know you asked for real estate investing advice, but I don't think
that's the most important thing. But I want you to focus on as character advice. What type of a man
do you want to be. Now, if you build up a work ethic, if you get a good job, if you consistently
show up, you build skills, you will continue to make more and more money working like you're broke.
Save that money. And when the time comes that you can actually buy a house and you make enough
money to afford it, you have a debt to income ratio that can support it. Then we're going to talk about
house hacking. We're going to talk about buying a house or renting out the room so the coworkers that you
have so that you can avoid having a mortgage expense or a housing expense because other people are paying
off your mortgage while you continue to work. But the most important thing is that it does not matter
what you buy. It does not matter where you invest. It does not matter how will those properties perform
or don't perform. The one thing that never changes is your commitment to doing your best every
single day. All right. So take a listen to this. Do some journaling. Do some soul searching.
Talk to anybody in your family that you can trust about how you can start right now being focused.
And then send me another video if you have any additional questions. Thank you for your submission.
All right, everybody, thank you for submitting your questions so far. I have loved them.
At this time of the show, we normally go over comments from YouTube videos of previous editions.
But today I'm going to switch it up a little bit and I'm going to read some fan reviews from Apple Podcasts.
Our first one comes from Coach Kaylee and she writes that this podcast is life changing.
I recently decided to put real estate investing on my goals list a few months ago after selling a commercial property that I owned.
I started listening to the podcast and I've blown a way.
way by the depth of information provided.
I listen to a podcast nearly every morning while working out.
I love, love, love Rob and David as host.
What a dynamite duo.
Fun and entertaining while still being massively educational.
I made so much progress just in the last month and recently joined the pro membership.
So thankful to have found the podcast and excited to see what this year brings.
Thank you for being raw, authentic, and transparent.
What a breath of fresh air in the online space.
Wow.
Thank you, Coach, Kaley.
Although you did say Rob and David, you should have said David,
Rob. Other than that, awesome review. Thank you very much.
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Did you know,
your house gets bored
when you leave?
I can't actually prove that,
but it probably misses out
on the action,
the footsteps, the late-night fridge raids.
Yeah, when you're gone,
your place is basically,
on unpaid leave. It's sitting there in the dark thinking, I could be contributing right now.
Your side room wants a side hustle. Even your Wi-Fi is like, we could be networking.
You're on vacation, spending money like it's a sport while your staircase at home is fully
capable of sending your income upwards. Here's the twist. You can go on a trip and actually
earn money. Airbnb makes that possible with the co-host network. If you're away for a while or have a
secondary property, you can hire a vetted local co-host with real hosting experience to handle
it all. A co-host can handle guest communications, it can manage reservations and keep things
running smoothly so you don't have to check your phone between beach days. That means less stress
and more time enjoying your trip. You can relax, knowing guests are taking care of and your place
is in good hands. You travel, your house works. Everyone wins. If you're ready to host but
could use some help find a co-host at Airbnb.com slash host.
Tired of traditional lenders holding you back,
host financial is here to change the game.
They've ditched the DTI restrictions and they zero in on what really matters,
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So no more chasing papers for tax returns or personal income statements.
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A lender that values your property's worth over your paycheck,
that's the host financial difference.
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Curious if you qualify,
just head over to hostfinancial.com and find out.
Stop letting outdated lending practices hold you back.
That's hostfinancial.com where your property's potential meets unlimited financing.
Real estate investors, the April 15th tax deadline is coming fast.
If you own rental property and haven't done a cost segregation study yet,
you could be handing thousands of dollars to the IRS that you don't have to.
These studies let you write off as much as 25% of your building and generate huge tax deductions.
Costsegregation.com is an online self-guided software that makes cost segregation fast and affordable.
So it finally makes sense for smaller rental properties purchased for as low as $100,000.
With pricing under $500 and an average savings of over $25,000, it's just a no-brainer.
What's more, audit support is included by the number one cost segregation company in the U.S.,
but you must complete it before the tax deadline.
Go to costsegregation.com and use code tax deadline to get 10% off your first report.
Don't overpay the IRS.
Head to costsegregation.com before April 15th.
The next one comes from an apoclover.
David, in quotes, the king of simplification.
Best podcast ever.
Dave and Rob are amazing educating us on real estate investing.
They interview the best of the best real estate investors who tell us their story and how they started out and what they're doing to be successful.
Well, thank you for that.
That was a very simple review, but still a powerful one, so I appreciate it.
And from Jennifer the Realtor.
Tons of strategy here, five stars.
This is not an exaggeration.
Bigger Pockets is one of the best podcasts you can listen to as an entrepreneur.
The amount of wisdom and strategy I have gained from David and Rob is incredible.
Stop what you're doing and listen.
That was awesome.
Thank you so much, Jennifer, the Realtor.
If you don't mind, you're listening to this.
If you could head over to Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen to your podcast,
podcast, Spotify, Stitcher, whatever it may be. Please leave us a review as well. They help a ton. And for those
of you that did leave reviews, those are incredible. Thank you very much for doing it. Send me a DM.
I'd like to thank you personally. All right, a couple YouTube comments from episode 762 that if you go back
and listen to this on YouTube, you can read them for yourself. Hi, David. Have you read Peter Zihon's
The End of the World is Just Beginning? I and many others I bet would love your thoughts on the future
of American real estate over the next decade or two. What do you the experts see happening with real estate
if the global economic position of the U.S. changes in ways that Zaihan has predicted they will.
Well, you definitely created some intrigue there because I have not read that book.
And now I kind of want to know about it.
And you didn't say anything in the comments about what it was.
So I can't give any further information.
But curious, if you guys have read that book, why don't you go to the comments in today's show
and let us know what you think about it or what you'd like answered.
And we will monitor that and possibly answer that in a future seeing green.
From Charlie Reese 95.
Hey David, we can't decide if we should turn our first property into a duplex or rent it as a single family home.
We bought our first house in Knoxville, Tennessee two years ago and we'll soon be searching for our next primary residence.
Focusing on the PRR method for now.
Our first property, which we currently live in, has an unfinished basement where we can add two bedrooms, a bathroom, a living room, and even a kitchen.
If we converted the home into a duplex, the top you know, would be a 3-1 and the bottom would be a 2-1?
Would it be worth the extra effort to convert the home or would it serve better as a 5-bed, 2-bath, single-family home?
Thanks.
question, Charlie, and lucky for you. There's a quick way we can figure this out. What's the rent
on a five-bedroom, two-bathroom home? Go to BiggerPockets.com, hover over tools, and then click on
rent-estimator, and put the address of the property, look up five-bed, two-baths and see what the rent is,
then look up three-bed, one-bathrooms, and add it to what you find for two-bed-one bathrooms,
and see which one is more. If it's significantly more to rent it out as two separate units,
then just ask yourself if the extra money is worth the investment to fix up the property.
It usually is if you're in an area with high priced homes.
If it's a super low priced area, sometimes that isn't a better move.
But that's all you got to do is compare a 3-1 and a 2-1 and add the rents
and then compare that to a 5-2 and see which one's higher.
And if it's significantly enough higher to justify the extra expense.
All right, guys, we love and we appreciate your engagement.
So please continue to do so.
Just like, comment, and subscribe on this YouTube channel.
and if you're listening on a podcast app,
take some time to give us a rating
and an honest review.
We want to get better and stay relevant.
So drop us a line and take that poll
if you're listening to it on Spotify.
Our next question comes from Todd Mason and Boise.
Hey, David.
My name's Todd.
I'm out here in Boise, Idaho.
My question for you is about private money,
hard money low that I have about coming due.
So a year ago bought a property with private money.
It was a year term for seven and a half
percent interest and two points. And it was a year, the year term, but I didn't have any payments due
for that year. And then at this, at the one year, we were going to refy and cash out the private money
and move in. But since things are pretty expensive right now, and it costs a couple points just to
get the loan, my letter has agreed to continue the terms and I could kind of structure it the way
that still benefits myself.
I'm wondering, so I still have a year's worth of interest at 7.5% and 2 points, which is about 4 grand.
So roughly the payoff is about 25 grand.
I can afford to pay it off and restructure for another year term going forward.
I could either do interest only, or I can advertise it for 30 years and then have another payoff date at a year from now.
I could either wrap the points and the interest into the total mortgage and amortize that if I'd like and not pay any money out of my pocket.
And I would still cash flow.
I use the property as a short-term rental here in Boise.
It would still cash flow with that payment.
But it's a little tighter than I would like to have.
My question to you is, I know that it's better to pay off along with tomorrow's.
dollars than today with inflation and so forth. If you're the situation, my gut would tell me,
and my conservative, that tells me to just pay off the past year with the points and structure
interest only knowing forward. I would still be able to bank up a bunch of cash flow for the year
and then continue to figure it out. Then at the next year, we'll see where we're at. Obviously,
we won't really know. But that would be my question to you. What would be the best way to
has structured this deal going forward.
Wrap it and reduce the cash flow or just pay off the debt go interest only or interest
only and advertise it.
So it would be principal and interest for the next year.
Any thoughts on a spare be greatly appreciated and kind of help me to just get to Jesus
slow enough how to move forward.
Again, appreciate your help so much.
Thank you.
All right.
Thank you, Todd.
Let's go over a couple principles here.
So in general, as the borrower, it is better to make interest-only payments than interest and principal because it just keeps a little bit more in your pocket.
However, if you're not great at saving money, I tell people they should amortize a loan, which means a portion of your payment will go towards the principal, not just the interest, and the payment will be higher, but you will be paying off the loan as you do it.
So if you're good at saving money, you can go with interest only.
If you're not, you probably want to be more conservative and include principal payments.
Another thing to look at, when it comes to if you should pay it off with the money you have and save interest,
or if you should keep the money that you have not pay it off, that only makes sense to continue paying interest if you have something else to buy.
Are you finding deals out there?
Are you finding stuff that gets you excited?
You're like, oh man, I really want to go buy this and I really want to go buy that.
And the numbers look great.
If so, keep your money and put it into more.
real estate, you're going to get a better than 7% return over owning it for 30 years. That's a no-brainer.
But if you're not finding a lot of deals or if this would light a fire under your butt to go make
more money and save more money, I would pay it down. Today's market is tough. We've got high rates
or higher rates and we've got not a lot of inventory. So there's not a ton to buy. This is not a time
to be playing fast and loose. Like really everything is just slowed down, right? Getting any real estate
is a win right now where it used to be people like, I want to buy nine properties in one year.
Man, if you could just get one property a year, you're doing good because there's a lot of
competition.
So don't feel pressure to keep all this capital when there's nowhere to go to play it because
it costs money to keep capital.
You're paying interest on that money.
You know you're going to get some kind of a return by paying it down.
So if your gut is telling you to pay that thing down and there's not a lot of real estate
to buy, I think you should follow your gut.
I think three years ago when there was tons of opportunity and rents were going
up every year. We were printing all this money. Values of real estate was going up. Tax benefits were
really, really favorable to people buying real estate. Sure. It made more sense to buy and my advice
tended to skew that way, but we're at a little bit different of an environment. So I would not feel
pressure to borrow money that you have no way to use. Hope that helps. Thanks for the question.
All right, from Kendrick and Albuquerque, New Mexico. Hi, David. I'm currently in a fortunate
situation after an unfortunate life event. In the last year, I was able to pay off my three
two home and it was left an additional, albeit smaller, three-bed two-bath home, which I'm
running out long term. I'm house-acking with a friend to cover the bills for my personal home.
Overall, I'm cash-howing $1,100 on the home I was left, and I want to expand with some funds
that were also left to me, but I'm unsure of the best way to do so. I'm interested in acquiring
more single-family homes, but through my listening to Bigger Pockets and a few other real estate
content creators, a multifamily seems to be the preferred way to upscale. Could you give me your
thoughts on my situation. Is there a glaring benefit to a small multifamily like four units that I may not be seeing?
Thank you. All right, Kendrick, let's break down the differences between multifamily and single family.
Multi-family will usually cash flow more for obvious reasons. You have more units to rent out. And even though each unit tends to rent for less than a single-family home, there are more of them. So the total rent is higher. But they tend to appreciate less because there's less people to buy them. They don't go up as much as single-family homes do.
Multi-family homes are harder to increase the value of.
It's harder to value add to a multifamily home.
It is what it is.
You can fix up the kitchens.
You can fix up the bathrooms, but there's usually not a ton to do.
And the people that are renting them are usually not expecting to get a really nice kitchen or a really nice bathroom.
So you don't add a ton of value when you fix them up.
Single family homes on the other end can have more value added by fixing them up because you're not selling to an investor.
You're selling when you exit to a person who just wants a house to live in who will pay more.
for a pretty house. Down payment options. When you're buying a fourplex, you're usually going to have
to put down 20%. Sometimes you can do 15%, depending on the loan product. Same for triplexes.
With a single family home, you can put down 5% on a conventional loan. Now, I believe there are
FHA loans that you can still use to buy multifamily properties with 3.5% down, but there's
a self-sustainability rule that says that several of the units have to make enough rent to cover
your mortgage and usually the price of multifamily is higher than the self-sustainability rule
will allow making it very hard to use these FHA loans on those properties, which brings
you back to the conventional loan where you're going to have to put three times or four
times as much down to buy small multifamily than single family. So what a lot of people are doing,
a lot of my clients are doing, a lot of the advice that I'm giving is to buy a single family
home and convert it into something like a multifamily home by adding 80Us. Take a house, fix it up,
change it, put up some walls, add some kitchenettes, turn it into two or three units that can be rented out.
And now you get all the benefits of small multifamily and you get all the benefits of single family.
So you win twice.
The downside is it's more work.
It doesn't come right out the box ready.
It's kind of like IKEA.
You got to put it together yourself.
So my guess is the people that are telling you to buy the four complexes aren't looking at all the information I just gave you.
They're just saying four units to rent out is better than one.
So you're going to cash flow better with the one.
Take into consideration what I said there.
Look at all the different angles and then let me know what questions you have after hearing this.
Thank you very much for reaching out, though.
I'm excited to see how things go.
Our next question.
I am from the D.C. area and have a Florida single family property that's paid off.
The cash flow is about $300 a month and is currently valued at $450,000.
Last year, my tenants broke their lease early and after spending a huge sum to get it back on the market to rent it again,
Hurricane Ian has put it out of commission for the last six months.
This made me realize two things.
I need more than just one door and two, I am no longer a fan of Florida real estate because of the hurricanes.
My house has been wrecked twice in 15 years and I need to start looking at other states.
I'm currently doing upgrades as I plan to use a 1031 exchange into a multifamily.
I have looked at the market in my area and the multi units are very pricey.
Ideally, I would like to get something that's reasonably priced, can still cash flow and appreciate over the long term.
Which cities or states would you recommend to look into where they're.
this down payment would go far. Oh boy, I love these questions. Thank you very much for that.
All right, I have no doubt that you would like to find something that is reasonably priced,
can still cash flow, and appreciate it over the long term. This is kind of like when a single person
says, I just want to find a girl that's smoking hot, already rich, super nice, never been married,
very low expectations, and thinks I'm wonderful. We all would love that, right? Everybody would like that,
but that person's property already married.
And that's the problem.
Those deals that are reasonably priced, cash flow, and appreciated over the long term are so in
demand that people buy them and then they become unreasonably priced because sellers can
sell them for more.
So you got to give something up.
And that's a part of understanding business and understanding real estate is what are you
willing to give up?
If you want more long term appreciation, are you willing to give up a higher down payment
to get into a better area?
Are you willing to give up the immediate gratification of cash flow?
If you want more cash flow, are you willing to give up having someone else manage it?
Because you're going to have to manage it yourself.
Are you willing to give up appreciation?
Because you might have to buy into a lower priced area where they don't go up as much.
The question should be, what am I willing to give up?
And I look at all the deals that I buy that same way.
All right.
I don't need this right now.
I really want that.
What am I willing to give up to get it?
Now, the other part of this is there used to be cities that I could say,
Yeah, this city has what you're looking for.
They don't have this, but they have that.
You should go there.
This is the only time in my career where I just don't have a city that I could say is reasonably priced cash flows and will appreciate.
There was a time that Nashville fit that.
There was a time that Atlanta fit that.
Heck, there was a time that Austin fit that.
There was, you know, when I first wrote long-distance real estate investing, there was a lot of options.
Phoenix fit that mold.
Unfortunately, those areas that are still appreciating.
over the long term are no longer reasonably priced and they also usually no longer cash flow.
Now, when you're trying to figure out what markets you want to be in, I can give you some
advice for where to look into that in the future could work out for you. And I would concentrate
my efforts if I was you in the south. States like Alabama, northern Florida, southern Georgia,
I think that there's quite a bit of the population moving that way. And though they may not be
they're cash flowing, but they usually don't have a ton of appreciation. I do think appreciation
is likely to be experienced later because of the increasing population that's moving there.
People are figuring out that they don't have to live in expensive cities like New York or New Jersey
and they're moving to where weather is warmer and prices are lower.
Now, these are not traditionally appreciating markets, but I do think that is the next wave
that we're going to see appreciating as people move there. I would not expect it to explode
like Nashville did, like Austin did,
even like Birmingham did for a period of time.
Bentonville, Arkansas,
sort of had a little mini explosion
compared to what it used to be.
But I do think you will get a steadily increasing appreciation
in those markets.
So look in the South,
look to where people are moving,
look to where jobs are moving,
and be patient knowing that rents will continue to increase
year over year as long as people keep moving there
and eventually they will cash flow very solid
and appreciate for you.
It just probably won't happen in the first year.
Thank you very much for the question. Glad I could help you out with that and good luck.
All right. That is our show for today. Let's recap a lot of this. First off, everybody's having the same problems, aren't we?
We are all having a hard time finding good deals. But what is a good deal? Well, it's relevant. Just like we said, when you're looking for someone to date, you're single, you're trying to find the best option available for you. What you're really doing is you're trying to find the best partner compared to all of your other options. That's something to remember with real estate.
while it may seem like there are no deals out there,
oftentimes what that means is there are no deals as good as what I saw two years ago,
three years ago,
four years ago,
five years ago,
that doesn't mean there are no good deals.
If you compare real estate to other investment vehicles like stocks,
like bonds,
like treasury notes,
like putting your money in the bank,
like certificates of deposits,
like cryptocurrencies,
like NFTs.
It's still looking really good.
I still think real estate's better than everything,
which is why I think all the money is flurricular.
letting to it. Heck, can you tell me a time where buying a bond was ever a bad idea where you'd be
criticized for owning too many bonds? Well, that's been happening to banks all over the country
as they've been literally going bankrupt from buying too many bonds, right? This is how solid real
estate is still. So keep that in mind. Don't get discouraged by the fact you're not finding the
cash flow that you used to. Adjust your expectations. So much of people's programming when it
comes to RealSit investing came from guru selling courses. It came from people saying,
if you just buy a couple investment properties, you can quit your job. You can stop working hard.
You can buy a Ferrari. You could do anything that you want with just a couple houses. And when we
find out that isn't happening, it's easy to get to scourage. Well, let go of that dream.
Investment properties are not meant to buy you the Ferrari. They are not meant to help you quit your
job. They can get you there, of course. And if you wait long enough, yes, that will happen. But
it's not going to be immediate. I think it is wiser to look at them as a way to grow your wealth,
help your children's futures, and plan for your retirement. They are still amazing for that.
It is still an excellent investment to buy real estate in growing markets if you're planning for
the future. It is exercise and futility in many cases if you're planning for right now.
So just keep this in mind as you're struggling. And remember, here's something else that's
important. If you're getting discouraged and you want to quit, so does your competition.
My jiu-jitsu coach mentioned this the other day. He said, hey, when you're rolling and you're really, really tired, don't make noises that let your partner know that you're tired. He told me he was in a competition one time and he was exhausted and he was getting ready to quit because he didn't think he could keep going. And he heard the guy that he was competing against making exhausted sounds and he knew, oh, I just got to outlast him. He kept going and he tapped the guy out 10 seconds later because the guy was really tired. And it was a good lesson in life. When you're
feeling tired, the other person might be also. You're having a hard time finding deals. So are other people.
You're getting discouraged. So are they. People are going to start dropping out of real estate investing
because it's hard. And that's good for those of us that stick with it. So play the long game,
not the short game. Making a marathon, not a sprint. Broaden your expectation and your timeline for when
you need to get the return and you will come out on top. Thank you guys very much for joining me with
seeing Green here today and staying the course.
If you'd like to be featured on the show, head over to biggerpox.com slash David and
submit your question there.
If you'd like to communicate with me directly or see what I got going on, follow me on
Instagram or your favorite social media at David Green 24 and check out my new website,
David Green24.com, to see all the things that I got going on.
Thank you guys very much.
I will see you next week.
Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on.
YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or any other podcast platform, our new episodes come out Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
I'm the host and executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer. The show is produced by Ian K. Copywriting is by Calico
content, and editing is by Exodus Media. If you'd like to learn more about real estate investing or to
sign up for our free newsletter, please visit www.w.com. The content of this podcast is for informational
purposes only. All host and participant opinions are their own. Investment in any asset, real estate included,
involves risk. So use your best judgment and consult with qualified advisors before investing.
You should only risk capital you can afford to lose. And remember, past performance is not
indicative of future results. Bigger Pocket's LLC disclaims all liability for direct, indirect,
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