BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 904: Does the BRRRR Method Still Work in 2024?
Episode Date: February 29, 2024For years, the BRRRR method (buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat) was every real estate investor’s favorite strategy. And it’s easy to see why. Using this simple formula, you can buy an outdated p...roperty, fix it up, lock in some solid equity, and then refinance, having the bank pay you back all the money you put into a deal. It sounds foolproof in theory, and up until 2020’s hot housing market, it essentially was. But things have changed. Home prices are higher than ever, mortgage rates are still double what they were during 2021, and everyone and their grandma now wants to invest in real estate, making more competition for these outdated homes. So, one big question presents itself: Does the BRRRR method still work in 2024? And, if it does, what are some ways to beat the competition and score a seriously good deal, no matter the mortgage rate? Well, we’ve got the man who literally wrote the BRRRR book on the show—our very own David Greene! David is giving his time-tested insider tips on how to build wealth with BRRRR, create more equity on your next home rehab, which new loans make BRRRR much better in 2024, and why you CAN’T rely on cash flow anymore, but you can rely on something MUCH more beneficial. Ready to get your first (or next) BRRRR done in 2024? This is the episode for you! In This Episode We Cover: The BRRRR method (buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat) explained Whether or not you can still do a BRRRR in 2024 (and if it’s even worth it) New types of loans for BRRRRs that make buying and cash-out refinancing MUCH easier Cost-cutting rehab tips to make sure you don’t go over budget on your next home renovation The not-so-basic “value-add” potential you NEED to look for in your next BRRRR property Massive tax benefits, long-term wealth, future cash flow, and more upsides of doing a BRRRR in 2024 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 Join BiggerPockets for FREE 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 Expand Your Investing Knowledge With the BiggerPockets Books Be a Guest on the BiggerPockets Podcast David's BiggerPockets Profile David's Instagram Rob's BiggerPockets Profile Rob' Instagram Rob's TikTok Rob's X/Twitter Rob's YouTube BiggerPockets' Instagram Grab The BRRRR Book How to Invest in Real Estate With the BRRRR Method Click here to listen to the full episode: https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-904 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 904.
What's going on, everyone?
I am David Green, your host of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
Joined today by my co-host Rob Abasolo,
and if this is your first time listening,
well, we are super glad to have you.
We've got an awesome show in place,
and Rob is here to help me bring it to you.
Rob, how's it going over there?
It's good.
I'm coming to you from a hotel conference room
where I had to kick everyone out.
They were running over on the schedule.
I was like, hey, guys,
I'm doing a podcast, and so they're all standing outside of here.
And it's very important for this podcast to happen because, David, I feel like this podcast
was made for you. We're calling it the Burr in 2024. Does it still work? Do we need to make tweaks to
the strategy? And we're here to give you the inside scoop. That's right. I know a thing or two
about Burr after doing about 50 of them in my career. And I even wrote a book on it, which you can
find at the Bigger Pockets Bookstore. So we're here today to give you an update on the strategy and how we
applying it in today's market. And this is so important that Rob, who is actually extremely conflict
diverse, did kick a bunch of people out of a hotel room. Rob, I'm very proud of you and thank you for
doing that. It was awkward. It was really, I was like, guys, I'm so sorry. You said I could use this and
it's just 1 p.m. and I got to go. And then they're like, oh, we're so sorry. So I have to bring it.
I have to hold my end of the bargain. So let's get into today's episode and talk about the burr.
All right. Let's do it. Let's set the stage first. Let's talk about what Burr is. We talk about it a lot.
And a lot of people are like, are you cold? Are you talking about the nemesis to Alexander Hamilton?
So, David, tell us what the burr is and why is it such a popular real estate strategy?
Burr is an acronym that stands for buy, rehab, rent, refinance, and repeat.
And it's a popular strategy because it is a way that kind of forces you to become what I call a black belt
investor in the book. You have to be good at the fundamental components of real estate investing
to be able to pull off a burr.
That's why I like it because it forces you to improve your skills.
You got to buy a property below market value.
You have to be able to rehab that property and add value to it.
You have to understand the financing of the property so that you can refinance and
your capital out.
It has to cash flow when you rent it out.
And then you have to build systems which allow you to repeat this process.
And it grew in popularity because it was a way of acquiring property without running out
of cash.
So the main benefit of the strategy is that you get capital out of the deal to put into
your next deal.
but it's not capital that you had to take out of the bank. It is capital that you pulled out of a property that was pulled from equity that you created through good investing. Yeah, let's contextualize this a little bit and let's help people understand the basic premise by putting some numbers here. So let's say that you buy a property for $50,000. Let's pretend like, yeah, this is a market where we can buy one for $50,000. You put $25,000 of rehab and work into it. And as a result, that property is now worth $100,000.
$100,000. You would then go to the bank and say, hey, I would like to do a cash-out refi because this
property is now more valuable than when I bought it. And if it does appraise for $100,000,
the bank, in general, will give you around 75% of that equity in a new 30-year amortized loan,
meaning in a perfect case scenario, you're able to get that $75,000 back to pay back your initial
investment and rehab budget. Did I explain that correctly? That is perfectly well said. And sometimes
it's not perfect. Sometimes you bought it for 50 and you thought you were going to put 25 into it,
but you put 45 into it. So you're actually all in for 85,000. And in that case, when you go to
refinance it and the bank gives you 75,000, but you are all in for 85,000, you leave $10,000 in the deal.
But that's still better than if you had to take the whole $25,000 down payment and put that towards
the house and then even more on top of that for the rehab. Right, right. So this has been a
a huge strategy really for a very, very long time. The acronym Burr was something that was coined,
I believe, by the bigger pockets community. That's right, right? Brandon Turner himself.
Yeah, okay. That's what I thought. And so, yeah, it's a strategy that's been utilized for a long time,
but has there been a moment in time in which the Burr strategy worked best? Well, yeah, the Burr strategy
allows you to get money out of your deal to put it back into real estate again, which means as long
as you've got new deals coming along, it works great because you're amplifying how quickly
you can acquire real estate. Now, it's also a buy and hold strategy. This is a strategy that you use
to keep a property. It's kind of like flipping, but instead of selling it to somebody else,
you refinance it and you keep it yourself. That means that it is susceptible to the same challenges
that all buy and hold real estate has. So if you can't find cash flow and properties,
you can't find burr properties because they have to cash flow when you're done. And if you can't
find properties to add value to, it's hard to find burr properties because you can't add value to
the property. And if you can't find great deals because there's a lot of competition, it's hard to
find Burr properties because you can't buy them below market value. So it really trends with buy and hold
real estate. Now, one of the ways that people have sort of adapted along is they've said, hey,
well, buy and hold real estate is really tough, but I'm going to get into short term rentals.
So they've used the Burr strategy and combine it with a short term rental instead of a
traditional rental. So when you're analyzing for rent, you just use short term rental analytics instead
of traditional model analytics. And then people call that the Airbnb Burr or the Burster. But really
that the strategy is a part of it the entire time. It's been a strategy that's worked for a long
time. But I think a lot of people on the podcast are probably like, hey, I'm on board with the
strategy, but it's 2024 and things are a little bit tougher now. So do you think you could provide
a little bit of context or clarity as to how the current market is making the Burr much harder than
it was in the last, let's say, 10 years or so? Yeah, absolutely. It's harder to find cash
filling deals because rates went up. So as interest rates have increased, cash flow has gone down,
but prices have not gone down. So that makes Burr tougher, just like all buy and hold real estate
is tough. Yeah. Another thing is that it used to be that there was tons of fixer uppers on the
market. When I was cranking these things out doing five a month, I could just go on the MLS, find a
bunch of ugly houses that have been sitting there for a long time, write really low offers,
put them into contract, and then once I got back my inspection report, figure out if I wanted to
move forward with the deal. Well, construction costs are much higher than they used to be. It's
harder to find contractors because everybody wants them. And there's less inventory to actually pick
from because less houses are hitting the market. It really does feel like contractor and rehab.
Contractor in the labor force already is hard enough to find. And as a result, rehab costs seem to
be much higher than they have been. And then if you've been around the borough world for the last
couple of years, there was that moment over the last few years where lumber was shooting up as well.
It seemed to be shooting up at the same time as interest rates. And so, yeah, all of that just kind of
created this weird standstill with constricting the housing supply. So there's a lot of reasons why
the burr has been a little bit more difficult, whereas I think maybe entering now, it feels like now
the interest rates are starting to go down. So at least we're trending in the right direction,
right? Yeah, the interest rates are going down, which makes it a little bit easier to find a
property that could cash flow. But the price of the properties aren't going down. They're probably
going to start ticking back up again, right? And all of the costs of things that go into real
estate, like you mentioned, the lumber, the materials themselves, the price you pay for the labor to get
the person to put the material into the house, that's all going up with inflation, which means that the
price of the house is going to keep going up with inflation. The odd dynamic that I'm noticing is that
rents are not keeping up with all those other things, because rents have an artificial ceiling put on
them. They can only go as high as what people get paid at their job. So as everything we buy becomes
more expensive, but wages aren't keeping up with that. Downstream of it, we find that rents can't
keep up as well. And so that means that even though the prices of these deals are going up,
the rents aren't quite keeping up with it, which makes the cash flow harder. And that becomes
one of the constrictions acquiring buy and hold real estate and slows you down. And Burr's really
meant to speed you up. Yeah. So let's talk about this a little bit. I want to talk about the
inventory or I guess the lack thereof. And what kind of major issues that's presenting for investors
today. Can you tell us, is there a specific correlation as to how inventory sort of affects the
birth strategy? Yeah, because inventory affects pricing. The less houses there are, if we're assuming
that demand is constant, but supply goes down, the more expensive something's going to get.
There's also less options for you to choose from because investors forget that they are competing
with other investors. Everybody listening to this podcast, you and me, everyone who reads these books,
everyone who's listening to the other podcasts and the other people that are internet influencers,
they're all teaching people how to go find real estate. So you have more people that are all trying
to buy these properties that have quit their jobs or quit pursuing their jobs and now they want
real estate to be their full-time hustle that are all going after the same inventory that's on the
market. In addition to that, you now have stuff that used to hit the MLS that everybody could buy
that gets bought before it hits the MLS. You've got wholesalers that are sending out direct mail
campaigns, text messaging campaigns, cold calling campaigns that are all trying to buy properties
before they get to the MLS before a real estate agent puts them on there. You've got big hedge funds
like Blackstone that are scooping up a lot of properties and they're trying to keep it inside
their portfolio. That all used to be inventory that hit the MLS and now it doesn't. So even though
on the surface it looks like real estate's the same as it's always been, it's actually very competitive
to where it used to be. And that's why we see so much less supply making its way down to the market
that we could buy it.
Yeah, but like, what can investors actually do about this?
Because everyone wants to break into this.
It's more competitive than ever.
Do you have any tips for anyone at home that may be struggling with the,
the onslaught of crazy competition even in 2024 when, I don't know, it seems like less
people would want to get into this, but the competition still seems pretty high.
Well, there's two ways.
You got to fight your way to the front of the funnel.
You can't just show up and look at houses on Zillow and think that you're going to get it
when everyone else is to.
You also have to be spreading the word among.
your specific sphere of influence that you're looking to buy houses. You've got to work just as hard
as the other people are that are sending these letters and looking for ways to create funnels to buy
off-market deals. You kind of have to make that a part of your everyday life is that everywhere
you go and you meet somebody, you say, hey, I'm looking to buy houses. If you know anyone that has
one to sell, let me know. And that's a bit of a nuisance. People don't like doing it. But if you
don't do it, it just means that house is going to go to the person that did. So acknowledging you're
in a competition, even though it's uncomfortable, is a healthy way.
way to start. The other way that I've incorporated into my investing is that I don't just look for the
low-hanging fruit. We used to be like, oh, man, look, ugly carpets, ugly cabinets, ugly kitchen.
I could buy that thing. Switch out that stall shower, make a tile shower. Boom, I've added equity.
I've got a flip or a burr if I want to keep it. Now you've got to think a little more creatively.
You have to think about different ways to add value to the real estate that you're acquiring, even if you
can't buy it at cheaper prices. So now with all that said, David, let's ask the, I think the main question
of the podcast here, the thing that people actually want to know what they came here for, which is,
is it actually still possible to do a successful burr in 2024? We're going to answer that question
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Welcome back.
I'm here with Serber himself.
David Green, and right before the break, I asked them the question we're here to answer. Is it still
possible to Burr in 2024? So let's jump back in. It is possible, just like it's possible to buy a
successful buy and hold real estate deal. But are you seeing as many of them, Rob? Are they
overflowing with abundance like they may have been five or six years ago? Probably not. No.
Yeah. It's just going to be harder, right? But it's harder because it's a better asset to get into.
Everybody's looking to buy these assets.
The price of them is going up.
That means that they will be a more solid long-term buy-and-hold strategy because it's going
to hold its value, but it's just going to be harder for you to find these deals.
And that's why I'm advising people to start taking the road that other people are skipping.
You actually have to treat this like a business as opposed to just looking for something
that would be easy and automated and money just flows to you without any work.
Yeah, so let me put you into this a little bit from a tactical standpoint because over the last
few years, we discussed how the labor force has been such a, it's been brutal in the real estate world.
And that has also been paired with a crazy supply chain shortage, which just, I think, has really
made things complicated. So have you seen any in your personal rehab that you've done or within your
network? Do you feel like there's been any relief at all in the supply chain to open up the goods
for the renovation process? You know, that's a great question. What I've found as the market that was
steaming along and crushing it, and
every property was gaining equity and transactions were taking place all the time and my real estate
team was crushing it. My loan team and company was crushing it and my properties themselves were
crushing it. It all kind of came to a grinding halt when those rates went up. It was scary how
fast the whole market turned. And so what I found is I had to pay more attention to my portfolio
and to the businesses. I couldn't just let the leader of the business run it because they were not being
careful enough with the money they spent, the training that they gave or the way that the employees were
performing. We had to really tighten up on everything. So I started hiring people to manage my own
properties as opposed to outsourcing that to third party property management. The same thing has been
true with the deals that I have going on. Like for some of the short-term rentals that I have,
if you let somebody else buy the materials, they're going to go buy a brand new pool table for
$5,000. But if I put somebody looking on Facebook marketplace every day for two weeks,
we find someone that needs to sell a pool table for $1,800 and negotiate it down to $1,200, right?
That's the principle that I've found you have to put into the deals you're doing.
So if you've already got a place under contract, it used to be a contractor gave me a bid.
I reviewed the bid.
I said, okay, sounds good.
I put a timeline in when I needed it done by and that was that.
Now I need to be involved in the process.
Okay, I'd rather have our team buy the materials and pay them the labor to do it because then
we can shop for the cheapest materials or we can look for really good opportunities.
James Dainert has done a couple of these shows and he's talked about the level of
of detail that he knows in every flip he's doing and what things cost. That's the level of
attention that you're going to have to pay to keep your rehab costs reasonable. And for people
that aren't doing that, they're just going to be frustrated. It's like, where's all my money
going? Well, it's going to the contractor. For sure. And because they mark up the materials too and
their time, which, you know, rightfully so in many instances. So let's talk about that. Let's say,
yeah, you bought the property. You're in this rehab process. It's the first R in Burr. Are there any
other tips or tricks for keeping your rehab down? Is there anything else you can do to cut costs,
especially if you're a first time or doing this? If you're a first time or doing it, your goal is to
learn. So you need to be involved in as much of the project as you can, learning what a contractor
does. Once you have a basic idea, you can keep your cost low by managing some of your own subs.
And for knowing when you buy a property, what type of stuff you need highly skilled labor to do
and what type of stuff can be done from less skilled labor that you can pay less. You really
want to avoid getting into the projects that have complicated electrical issues or complicated plumbing
issues or have really complicated permit stuff. We're going to have holding costs to skyrocket
because you're waiting a long time with the deal. You want to get into the kind of projects that
need a lot of drywall work, sheet rock work, flooring that's going to be done, paint, dry rot issues,
perhaps. Like that type of stuff can be done by lower skilled labor so that you can save money
on materials and then not get hammered when you have to go pay someone a ton of money to do the
work. Yeah, I'm a big advocate for maybe taking on some of the DIY aspect on your first
burr or your first rehab, simply because I think there's an intangible skill that you learn from
that, which could be the actual craft of doing a skill like, I don't know, drywall or anything
like that. But what I think you actually learn is how difficult it is to do something and how much
it's worth to you to pay that kind of thing. Because for me, for the first house that I ever bought,
I did a lot of my DIY projects. I knew what was hard. I knew what was hard. I knew.
what wasn't hard. That way, anytime I actually worked with the contractor, I was like, hey,
this $10,000 bid should be more like $2,000 and, you know, I'm not too dumb here, right? So I think a little
experience goes a long way. Are you an advocate for DIYing a burr or your first rehab in any capacity?
Well, I'm an advocate for doing whatever you can to reduce your risk when the market's tough.
So for instance, maybe you can't find a flip property, but can you do a live-in flip?
Absolutely. Right? That reduces your risk a ton. Maybe it's really,
tough to find like a big burr property we can get 100% of the money out but can you find a burr property
where you leave some money in but it's it's significantly less than if you had bought it and you
bought in a great location where it's going to appreciate and then three years you're going to take all
that equity you're going to roll it into the next opportunity uh you have to compare the opportunities
that you're looking at today with the other opportunities you have today not the opportunities that you
heard about five or six years ago from people that are on podcast talk about this great portfolio they
have when they bought when the market was different
David, something you mentioned that I don't want to gloss over because I think this is super important,
but it seems like the time horizon for a burr has changed, whereas when the market was more flexible,
we had a little bit more flexibility with how quickly or how slowly we could do that burr.
But do you feel like the timeline has shifted in 2024 with how long one should take during this entire process?
Yeah, and for investing in general, I do think that.
In fact, that's the next book that I have coming out with Bigger Pockets Publishing,
is on this exact topic that we sort of need to change our expectations for real estate and therefore
change our strategy. Now there's less to buy. There's less meat on the bone and it's harder to get
cash flow. The whole thing is trickier. Does that mean don't do it? No, it means to adjust your
expectations. So this book that I'm writing is about breaking our addiction to understanding that
cash flow is the only reason you buy real estate. Cash flow was one of 10 ways that you make money
in real estate. And several of these ways involve long-term delayed,
It's buying property in the best areas, adding value to those properties, doing what you can to
buy in beneath market value and incorporating other strategies like reducing your tax burden
and buying in areas where the cash flow itself is going to increase because the rents are going to go up more than surrounding areas.
And when you put all these strategies together in the same deal, and then you wait.
What you find is you still get incredibly good returns.
You're just not getting them right away.
So I'm trying to get people to stop looking at real estate as the magic pill to help them escape the job.
they hate or the life that they hate or the fact that they're struggling with things.
And look at real estate as being the carrot that you pursue that gets you to step up your game
when it comes to the effort you're putting into work, the skills that you're building,
the education that you're acquiring because, Rob, you've seen this too.
The wealthiest people that we know bought real estate in good locations and they waited a really
long time. And all the strategies that we talk about here are just designed to get you to that
point safely. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's all about also being adaptive and being nimble.
which is why you're you're titling that book, Pillars of Stealth, right?
That's really nice.
I like that.
All right, so let's talk about sort of like the next R here, which is rental, which there's
some parallel pathing that's going on during the rehab and the rental side of things,
because when you're rehabbing, you have to sort of know, hey, how nice should I make this rehab
or how standard can I make it?
I'd imagine there's a level of analysis that one should do by looking at the rentals in
your area or in your neighborhood to see how nice they are and ask yourself, am I matching them?
Or is there a delta in actually being a nicer quality burr? And will that delta yield me more profit?
It's a great question. And the answer is sometimes there's three main reasons that I see people
rehabbing a house. You're either rehabbing it to sell to someone else, which is a flip. You're rehabbing
it to keep it as a long-term rental or you're rehabbing it to keep it as a short-term rental.
okay so if you're trying to flip it you don't want to make it nicer than the surrounding areas because
then you'll have a more expensive property that the appraiser won't give extra value to and you won't
be able to sell it for as much as you thought because it won't appraise so in that circumstance no make
your property as nice or maybe a tiny bit nicer than not only the other properties in the neighborhood
but you want to compare to the other properties that buyers have available for sale you actually want to
look at the existing inventory that you're competing with when your house goes on the market and be a
little bit nicer than them, but not a ton nicer. But has this change, though, over the past years?
Because I agree that is an underlying principle of the burr. But do you feel like today, nowadays,
renters are more demanding? Do they want more out of their rentals? Because I can tell you from an
Airbnb or a short-term rental standpoint, the guests are definitely more demanding. I feel like they
want like this five-star resort kind of thing. And I'm curious if that also transcends over to the long-term
rental side of things. What I'm trying to get at here is that the renter or the renter, or
the guest on Airbnb or the buyer of the flip, whoever your end product person is going to be
is going to compare your property to their other options. And you want to be a little bit better
than those options. You don't want to be too much better than those options because then you wasted
money. You don't want to be not as good as those options because then they won't choose your
property. And you don't want to be exactly the same as those options because then you'll be
slightly competitive until your competitors do a little bit better. So you have to understand
the reason you're rehabbing it. If you're rehabbing it to flip, you want to compare it to the other
properties available for sale as well as the other properties in the area. If you're doing it for a
standard renter, it doesn't matter if it's really nice or not that nice. What matters is what their
other options look like. If they have a ton of inventory to choose from, yours has to be nicer. But in
most markets, there's not enough rental inventory. So if this is just a standard buy and hold rental
on a year-long lease, you don't need to make it super nice. You need to make it super durable so that things
don't break all the time. But to your point, Rob, if this is a short-term rental in a highly competitive
market. Yes, you need to over rehab. You need to make it extra nice. You need to make it nicer than
the other competition and so much nicer than the rest of the competition that you buy yourself a
couple years for everybody to catch up to you. Makes complete sense. All right, now that we've covered
a few tactics that investors can use to give themselves an edge to make Burr work in 2024,
we're going to get into some good news about how financing options have changed and improved.
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Welcome back, everyone. Rob and I are here talking about how the burr has changed
and how they can still work in today's market.
So let's get into the good stuff.
I want to get into the next R here, which is refinance.
And this to me seems like what feels like the biggest crapshoot in the entire system of Burr because
lots of things are changing, interest rates are changing, appraisals are always, you know, finicky.
You never know what you're going to get when appraisal.
You can have a pretty good idea.
And then market conditions and corrections are happening.
So tell us a little bit about what the financing options are for people doing the Burr strategy.
Today in 2024, are rates any better?
Is there a more positive outlook than there has been over the last year?
Rates are higher than they used to be, but lower than they were recently. So they're sort of
trending in a better direction right now. They're still historically low. And you actually have
more financing options available now than I ever saw before. So you had a couple options. You could
pay cash for stuff, which is what I was doing and what most people were doing. You could pay cash
with somebody else's money, like private money, which you kind of had to be an experienced operator
to get people to trust you with their cash. You could get a hard money loan, which was not very
flexible and very expensive or you could get a conventional type loan and then refinance out of it
once you were done. But that was expensive because you had a lot of closing costs. Now there's a lot of
products like bridge products that we offer where you can go in and you can borrow the money for
the purchase and the rehab, right? You put 15% down on the purchase and 15% down on the rehab.
And not having to pay for 100% of your rehab is a significant savings and how much money you're
having to come out of pocket for. And those are usually loans that last for a year.
year, sometimes two years. So once you're done with that project, three, four, six months later,
whatever it is, you can refinance out of it into a conventional loan or into a DSCR loan. Since the point
of buying these properties is to keep them, they're supposed to cash flow, you can use DSCR loans to
help make sure that you qualify for a loan, even if you have more than five properties, even if you have
more than 10 properties, even if your own debt to income ratio can't support continuing to acquire
properties, which was one of the old throttles of Burr.
It's like, yeah, I got deals and I got money and I got contractors, but I can't keep
refinancing out of them because my DTI can't keep up.
Well, now you've got a lot more lending options that will allow you to do it.
So even though the rates haven't been as favorable as they were eight years ago, the lending
flexibility is much more favorable.
Yeah, and for everyone that may not know what a DSCR loan is that they're very powerful
and beautiful tools.
It stands for debt service coverage ratio.
Basically, what that means is the bank.
will use the projected rents of a property to approve you for that, to underwrite you on that
loan. And so, yes, David was talking about the DTI or debt to income ratio. When that maxes out,
it's very hard to get a loan conventionally, but a DSER loan is really looking more at the actual
projection of that rent. So it's a really powerful tool. It's a little bit more expensive,
usually than a conventional loan. Yeah, it's about usually a point higher on the rate,
usually. But still worth consideration. And I wanted to ask because there's sort of this idea or this
concept being tossed around where should we replace the R to an H and pull helix instead of
refinancing with the interest rates as they are right now. The bur. Yeah, that can make sense if you think
rates are coming down in the future. If you think they're going to go down, you can get a helock.
It's a lot less expensive as far as the closing cost go. And you can still get your money out of
deal to put into the next one. So Helox will make it easier to continue to acquire more properties
if instead of refinancing the entire note, you just put a helic on the equity, but they increase your
risk because most of the rates on helox are going to be adjustable. And if rates go up instead of down,
well, then when you do have the refinance out of the helock, you're going to get a higher rate than if
you had just done it in the beginning. Yeah. And just one quick caveat here. Heloc stands for
home equity line of credit. You're basically taking a line of credit on the on the equity.
of your house, which I guess makes sense. That's why they call it a helic. But one thing that's not
talked about enough is the fact that when you take a helock on a property, that is a loan,
in a sense, because it's like a line of credit. So there is a note, a monthly note that you have to
pay. So you just want to make sure that you are accounting for that in your analytics and in your
analysis of a property. And every helock is structured a little differently. I've seen five
different ways that HELOC payments are calculated. So just make sure that you understand the mechanics
of how the HELOC works for your personal bank. That is right. I guess sometimes we forget to mention
that when you take out a loan, it usually involves some kind of repayment. But yes, that's exactly
the case. Yeah, because hellocks are really powerful. They're really cool things. And they're,
in a perfect scenario, they can get you out of a bind. But yeah, we don't ever talk about the possible
downsides. One of them also being that if you're taking a HELOC out like on a primary residence,
that also adds to your DTI.
So just keep that type of stuff in mind as you explore that option.
That's right.
So to sum that up, rates are higher and they're less favorable than they were in real estate
heyday.
But options and flexibility is better than it's ever been when it comes to getting
loans on properties.
You can literally get a really good bridge loan to acquire the property and fix it up.
Borrow most of the money to do that.
And if you do the things that we're talking about now, you focus on adding value
to the property.
You add square footage.
You add bathrooms.
if it doesn't have enough, you do a really good job on that remodel, you create a lot of equity,
then you refinance out of that into a conventional 30-year fixed rate or a DSCR 30-year fixed
rate. It's actually pretty smooth to the financing where that used to be a big area of concern
when you're trying to scale a portfolio. Sure. And before we wrap today, I did want to ask you,
considering that burs are different today than they were five years ago than they were 10 years ago,
what metrics actually make a successful burr today? And how is that different from previous market?
cycles. In the previous market cycle, we told everybody get as much cash flow as you can. And that's the
reason that you invest. Well, as cash flow has somewhat dried up, it leaves people with the questions
of should I invest in real estate at all because the reason I was told to do it is gone. And I would
still say yes, but you're not going to get the immediate gratification that cash flow provides. You're
going to have the shift to delayed gratification. Good news is, when you compare the money that you make
over a 20-year period of time in appreciation and loan paydown, especially if there's a value add
component to your real estate, it dwarfs however much cash flow you think you could have made.
Take like the biggest buffest guy that you've ever seen. That's cash flow. And this appreciation
is like Godzilla. You can't really compare it, right? It just, you have to take that longer term
horizon outlook, which is why bigger pockets has been doing a great job of providing overall
financial education. It's not about just let me get a couple houses and I'm out of the game and
I've retired home on the beach of the Mai Tai.
It's about building up your skills.
It's about delaying gratification.
It's about making wise investments that will grow over time.
It's about taking advantage of the tax benefits you get.
Or about starting a business within real estate and sheltering some of that money with
real estate.
Look at real estate as an amazingly crucial piece, a cornerstone of an overall financial
strategy that you need to put together and you'll fall in love with it.
If you look at real estate as an individual brick that you can just stand on and have your
entire building based on, it's going to let you down. Absolutely. I think, you know, we talk about it
often on the show that real estate has several levers. Cash flow, appreciation, tax benefits,
debt pay down. And depending on the market cycle you're in, the levers are going to be a little
different. So understand that going into it, because I always saw people going back to what you were saying,
like, I don't know. Sometimes people see breaking even on a burr, like, not a good thing. And I'm like,
guys in Vegas they say a push is a win. That's great. Breaking even on a house that you got for free.
Come on. Well, not only that, they don't see it as a good thing if they didn't get more money out of it or if it doesn't cash flow right away.
But if I said to you, Rob, hey, you're going to do a deal. You're going to get all of your money out or a little bit of it out. And it's going to break even on cash flow. But you're going to have created $75,000 of equity. You're going to be paying off a loan every single month with the renter's money. The rents are going to go up every single year from where they are today. The value is going to go up every single year.
from where it is today. And this is going to save you $50,000 in taxes that you were going to have to
pay. Oh, and by the way, if you want to add an ADU to it or another component of it, this deal would
work for that when you finish the basement. That's going to add square footage, more value, and it's
going to increase a whole new income stream, which is going to be going up every single year like the
others. And maybe you even short-term rental part of it and you do the other part traditionally.
Can you tell me how that's a loss for you? No, I can't. I was taking furious notes, as you said,
all of that and I just I can't argue with any of that David I would like that YouTube video if I was
watching that on the YouTube video so if you're watching this on YouTube hit the like button hit the
subscribe button leave us a comment down below and I think that wraps up today's episode of burn
24 is it still a viable option the answer is yes nicely done brother you just got to adapt with the
times like we've always had I remember at one point burr was an adaptation right when we were talking about
it was like what you can get your money out of the deal at one point
long distance investing was an adaptation, right?
Well, it's crazy.
You could buy in a different market that's not your backyard,
and there were so many podcasts done on how to do it.
We're still going to have to be adapting,
and that's why you listen to podcasts like this.
So thanks for that, Rob.
You want to take a shot at my nickname today?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is Rob for David Sir Burr Green.
Signing off.
Signing off.
And see.
Thank you all.
for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast. Make sure you get all our new episodes by
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