BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - How I Built a $100K/Year Passive Income Stream in 5 Years
Episode Date: October 13, 2025How much passive income would you need to retire early? $60K/year? $80K/year? $100K/year? What if you could build a financially freeing passive income stream in just five years? Five years from now, y...ou could retire early, quit your job, or keep building wealth. What would that freedom feel like? Joe Hammel has already achieved it, using a simplistic, beginner-friendly “bread and butter” rental strategy. Today, he’s generating $115,000/year in pure cash flow from his rentals, just five years after buying his first rental. In this episode, Joe shares exactly how he grew his six-figure passive income stream and the exact blueprint you can use to replicate it. Joe invests in a market that real estate investors used to laugh at—Detroit. However, the tables are now turning, as Detroit continues to see solid appreciation, cash flow, and affordable prices. Joe buys houses for $100,000 (yes, even today), often using the “slow BRRRR strategy”, and rents them out for well above his costs. He says out-of-state investors can do this easily as well, and he has helped dozens repeat his system. This could be your path to achieving financial freedom in under a decade, just like Joe! In This Episode We Cover The “bread and butter” rentals beginners can buy to build passive income streams Why Joe says Detroit is such a solid real estate investing market (especially now) Using the “slow BRRRR” method to build wealth faster and increase your equity The best rental property types to target (for beginner investors, especially!) How to invest in affordable markets even if you live hours away And So Much More! Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-1186 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
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This investor buys houses for only $100,000 just outside a major city.
He fixes him up, he rents him out, and repeats the process.
It's only taken him six years of using this simple formula to grow a portfolio that's now cash
flowing $9,000 of passive income every single month.
There's no big secret to his success, and in fact, he's helped dozens of other investors
buy almost identical properties and start their own journey towards financial freedom.
Today, he's sharing exactly how he's done it so you can follow the same path too.
Hey, everyone, I'm Dave Meyer.
I'm the head of real estate investing at Picker Pockets, and I've been a rental property investor
for more than 15 years.
Our guest on the show today is Agent and investor Joe Hamill, who lives and invests
outside of Detroit.
Joe only got into real estate six years ago, but he's managed to buy 24 properties,
which generate over $100,000 in cash flow every single.
single year. And on the show today, he's going to explain how he's scaled such a profitable
portfolio with very affordable properties, why he's converted to the slow-burr strategy,
love that, and his best advice for other investors looking to do these exact same types of deals.
Let's bring on Joe. Joe, welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast. Thanks for being here.
Thanks, Dave. It's great to meet you. Yeah, super excited to have you on and hear a little bit about
your story. So give us your background. Where are you from and how do you find yourself getting into
real estate investing? Well, I'm originally from Ohio. I now live and invest in the Metro Detroit
market. And I signed my first lease. It would have been about five years ago exactly to today.
It would have been on October 1st, 2020. Since then, my wife and I, we have bought 24 properties.
It's 31 doors. And where cash for...
flowing, it's, it's 115,000 a year after budgeting for vacancy maintenance at CapEx.
Sounds like an incredible portfolio to do in five years. And you've also done that across
two really different markets starting in 2020. Fast forward to today, totally different
landscape that we're in. So I'd love to just break down how you've done this. But would first
just want to understand sort of your goals and motivation for being an investor in the first
place. I was working in a factory. It was in manufacturing. And I quickly realized that's not what I
wanted to do for the rest of my life. So when I was kind of searching, trying to figure out what I
wanted to do, I was talking to my buddy, Jake Graff. And he's like, hey, man, you need to listen
to Bearer Pockets. And so for many of us who have done that, it flips your world 180. He was
house hacking at the time. So he explained that to me. And so I went down the rabbit hole of
multiple podcasts a day, watched all the YouTube videos. I read all the books. I was in the forums.
And so that's when it really triggered like, this is what I'm going to do either full-time
side hustle. I'm going to figure this out. Well, absolutely love hearing that, that Bigger Pockets
has helped you hone your vision and figure out how to get into real estate. What is it about
real estate that's resonated with you that previous careers in manufacturing wasn't doing for
you?
It's the common man's path to wealth, right? It's just the greatest investment. When you look at how much money you can make in cash flow and then appreciation, loan pay down and your tax benefits, it's just you can't compete with it as an investment vehicle. So just dump all my money into it is the best place for it to be.
I love that approach. I've never heard it describe specifically that way, but it makes so much sense to me. Actually, what makes real estate so interesting that I love.
is you don't have to like invent anything. You know, it's a path to entrepreneurship where you're not
having to come up with some new genius business model. Yeah. It's just a repeatable formula that
pretty much anyone can follow, which is super cool. So how did you go about financing,
finding your first deal, and what kind of deals were you looking for off the bat? Yeah. So I had done
two deals in Ohio where I bought land, I bought a house, and I sold those.
when I moved to Michigan.
And so that was where I initially had some capital.
I made like 40K, 20K on each of those.
And then by working, I came to Michigan, I had like 50, 60 grand.
And so my first property, I was really looking for a house hack, right?
I was doing, I was trying to do what I was supposed to do.
But coming to Michigan, that was a bit overwhelming.
I didn't know how to recognize what a good house hack was.
So I ended up going with a safe bet, which was I just picked a single family home.
and it backed up to a nice neighborhood.
It was on a busy street, but I got it for $103,000.
I was going to live there for a while, and I knew eventually my wife and I would get married
and we'd buy another house and that would be my first rental property.
And so that ended up being the first property.
I bought it for 103.
I put $15K into it.
It's worth like $190 today.
And I thought it was going to rent for like $1,300 a month.
But I ended up signing a two-year lease at $1,600 a month.
And so it's cash flowed $600 a month for five years straight at this point.
That's incredible.
Well, it sounds like you did pretty well figuring out where to buy the first one.
You know, this podcast is a long history with Detroit.
I don't know if you know this, but like Josh and Brandon, when they first started,
Josh loved to hate on Detroit.
Yeah.
But I've heard that it's one of those markets where if you know the market well,
you can do really well, but it's not for people who are.
maybe out of state or haven't spent the time researching it. Do you think that's true?
I mean, I say this in good fun. There's two types of people who dog on Detroit. And it's people
who have never bought a property there and people who did it wrong. Okay, that's fair. Because if you do it
right, you can really make a lot of money. And we've really identified what doing it right looks like.
We call them bread and butter deals. And if you buy those, they're just a great balance of price,
rent ROI location, and we see a lot of success with them. That's great. So what are those bread and butter
deals? Is it similar to what you bought on that first one? These properties, there's your suburbs,
bread and butter, and then there's your Detroit bread and butter. Suburbs are going to be a little
higher price, a little lower ROI, and a little easier experience. And that's the difference between
suburbs versus Detroit. And so to break it down as concisely as possible, it's going to be an 80K to a
$130,000 house. They're going to rent for $1,100, $1,500 a month. They're one to 1.4% rule deals.
Cash on cash, $6 to $12. Cash flow $500 a month. They're good appreciation. We grade properties
A to F. And so these are what we call a C plus B minus. So what is your definition of a C plus?
Like describe the neighborhood for us. Well, yeah. So in my portfolio is a great example.
I have 30 plus doors
and in five years I've had
two evictions and I've had
maybe five or six tenants stopped paying
and I've had to send them a notice to quit and get rid of them
somebody stole a trash can once
and somebody kicked in a garage door
or the only two crime that I've dealt with
in what? Yeah, I've way more than that.
Right. And then vacancy is another one that people will look at
I have very little vacancy. I have one unit vacant right now
just because the tenant moved out a week ago.
So that's what I'm calling
a C plus B minus market.
And what condition are the properties in?
So I do a lot of light to medium sweat equity and probably favoring the medium sweat
equity.
So I'm doing the cosmetic plus type rehabs.
Now, again, you can find the turnkey at the higher price range of the bread butter.
I'm staying lower price range with more sweat equity.
And what does that deal look like?
So you said you're, you know, you're buying it for what, 80, 100 grand and putting how much
to it. In 2023, my average single-family home purchase price was $80,000. And my average rehab was probably
15, maybe touching 20K rehab. I'm asking these questions about the specifics because these seem like
very approachable kinds of deals, right? Even if you're putting 25% down with traditional financing
on an $80,000 property, it's $20,000 down. You know, with a reno of $15,000,000, you need closing costs.
you need reserves, you know, $50,000, obviously a lot of money, but more palatable to a lot of
people who maybe don't want to go to the house hack strategy and put three and a half percent down
or live in a super expensive market. This just seems quite achievable for people who are
thinking about or are comfortable with out-of-state investing, presuming you don't live in Detroit.
You know, the question I think you hear about Detroit that I just curious your opinion on, Joe,
is like, what about the appreciation?
Because it seems like cash flow is pretty solid.
You know, post-COVID or going into sort of a flatter market,
what do you think appreciation goes from here?
You know, I'm sure you've looked at the data.
But recently, we've done really well, especially in the post-COVID era.
I mean, we're in the top, the 2023, we're number one,
at least by some sources.
Yeah.
And ever since, we're still 6, 7%, even just 2024 or 2025,
which most markets, they can't say that.
And I think it comes down to one major thing.
I think it's affordability.
I think the other markets that are struggling, it's because of affordability.
And the reason why Detroit isn't is because we still are a low enough price point that we have room to grow.
I agree.
It's kind of been my whole thesis is just that these markets that are affordable, people are going to still keep transacting.
Whereas other markets I invest in, it's just unaffordable.
And you see the market coming down.
There are obviously still people doing stuff.
but the number of transactions is just really low.
And we've just reached the point where we can't stretch affordability.
People are not able to pay.
And maybe when things get a little bit cheaper, they'll jump back in.
But these markets, Milwaukee, obviously Detroit, Cleveland, a lot of the Midwest, this is where
things are happening because it's where people who live there and work there and have
normal jobs are still able to participate in the housing market.
That's a healthy housing market.
I think bodes well for those types of markets in the future.
future. So this is fascinating. Love hearing the specificity of the kinds of deals that you're
buying here. I'd love to hear a little bit about your story, though, how you've evolved your
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Welcome back to the Bigger Pockets podcast here with investor Joe Hamill.
who's been growing his portfolio in Detroit for the last five years.
We heard a little bit about your first deal where you bought a house hack.
How did you grow your personal portfolio from there, Joe?
I bought that first one, run it out in 2020.
And then in 2021, we bought, I think it was five deals.
And the funding for that came from that original 5060K that I moved to Michigan with.
And I also, 2021, I was able to pull out my 401k penalty free using the COVID, whatever that was.
So that was more funding.
I did a couple of the softbers.
You've been calling them a slowber.
We call them a software.
Whatever you want to call.
Yeah.
Let's use slowber.
We got to standardize this.
Slober is what it is.
I agree.
It's a better name than software.
So it was able to pull some out there.
And then my wife, she had a good income and we both determined, hey, let's live 100% off of your income.
And then everything that I make through my job and as an investor, we're going to reinvest all that cash flow.
So that was the funding.
Every time I hit a certain threshold of money, I would go look at the market and I'd pick out a deal and execute.
So you would have one going.
You would do the renovation, rent it out, get rents up to market rate.
And then you would refi so you would basically take some or all of that money, combine it with your income to finance the next one?
Exactly. And most of the time it was some of the money. I did hit one perfect bur. Wow, that's awesome. Wow. I'm asking that because I, you know, if you listen to the show, you've heard me talking about the slow burr. And I like this because it's more realistic and it's just a little less pressure in today's day and age. And just want to reiterate that doing the quote unquote perfect burr where you can refinance it.
100% of your cash is just pretty rare these days. I'm sure it still happens, but it is pretty
rare. And I really just think in the new realities that we're facing, having appropriate expectations
is super important and not expecting to achieve returns that just don't exist anymore. That doesn't
mean they're not still life-changing events that are going to help you move towards your financial
goals. It just means we're not in this free money period where everything was perfect. So I just wanted to
make sure people understand that the burr still really works. These perfect burrs were just there at a
certain time and is not what we should all be expecting. So, you know, you keep doing these same
deals for five or six years. How have you avoided this shiny object syndrome that I certainly
get in real estate? I think a lot of people do where you want to try everything. I want to do short-term
rental. You want to flip. You want to do creative finance. You want to do everything. How have you,
and why have you just stuck to the same approach? I think you said it in terms of
of haven't you had shiny object syndrome?
I think it's because I was aware of not having it, right?
That was a very conscious decision I made early on was don't do that.
Get good at something and get bored with it, whether it's, you know, your job or investing.
And I had something.
I hit success on my first one, two, three deals.
And so I was just clear the slate and repeat the same thing 20 times.
That's awesome.
It seems like even though the market has been hot, finding deals hasn't been hard.
No, I would say in 2024 was kind of a shift in my strategy. That was an extreme seller's market.
Interest rates were higher then than they are today. So I really went from an average price in
2023 of 80K to an average price of 125k in 2024. I'm still getting 6 to 9% cash on cash ROI,
but I really made those changes for a couple of reasons. The one was,
was the market adjustment, right? It just, I had to. The $80,000 house was now a $100,000 house. To get the
same profile of property, I had to go up in price. So that decision was kind of made for me.
And then the second reason why I really went from $100 to $125 was my personal strategy change.
I already had 15, 16, and 17 bread and butter, really good cash flow. They were two one,
three one sided houses, maybe a little bit of character.
And so now I was like, okay, let's get, let's go up a notch.
And I was looking for brick.
I wanted a basement and a garage.
I didn't want any character.
And so that just took me up then to the 125 price point.
So all four of my deals in 2024 looked exactly the same with that 125 price point.
Okay.
And is that kind of, I mean, I assume it's gotten up a little bit, but those kind of deals are still
available to you?
Yeah.
I mean, like I said, shoot fish in a barrel.
I could probably pick a couple out right now.
pretty incredible. So let's talk a little bit about specifically what to look for, because
obviously not everyone is going to invest in Detroit. But I think this model that you've created
is somewhat repeatable in a lot of markets. Obviously, you know, if you're living on the
coasts, it's probably pretty expensive. But if you're investing somewhere in the southeast or
in the Midwest, there's a lot of these kinds of deals. So let's just talk characteristics,
not just price point. Like, are there certain bedroom counts you're looking for?
And how do you try and identify that sweet spot of value add?
I think that's a big question for a lot of people.
Like what one person calls a cosmetic renovation could be totally different from what another person calls a cosmetic renovation.
So what are the kind of properties and upgrades that you're trying to target?
So a lot of these are two ones and three ones, right, which a lot of people, they really want the three, two.
But I think the ROI is higher on the 213 one because less people want them.
Your price to entry is lower.
So you're doing these 213 ones, which makes sense to me.
Are you doing kitchens, bathrooms, floors?
Like what's the scope of the renovation you're trying to do?
The lighter ones are painting and fixtures.
So you go in and you paint and you do new light fixtures, new knobs, new faucets,
and the whole house looks great.
Yeah.
That's your light version.
versus your medium one is like, okay, we're going to replace all the toilets, all the
fixtures.
We're painting.
We're refining the floors.
We've got to do all of our landscaping outside, maybe replace the furnace.
Something like that is what I consider a medium versus large as you're doing a gut job.
And I think that's when your risk goes through the roof when you take on those big ones.
Yeah, literally.
It goes into your roof a lot of the time.
Yeah.
But, yeah, I think that makes a lot of sense.
And is that sort of what you recommend?
for newer investors is taking on like that kind of fixtures paint kind of thing first.
Yeah, definitely.
It's why I'm really cheering on your slow burn messaging right now because it's just so much more
realistic to hit the lighter sweat equity and get your feet wet on those.
And if you want to go more aggressive after that, do it.
But to start out, just take on the lighter stuff.
But I do like taking on some sweat equity because that's how you're going to force ROI
in a property.
If I had my druthers, I would pay a little bit more and buy a stabilized turnkey property that had solid cash on cash return, not amazing.
And those still exist sometimes in some places, but the juice is just better on a light cosmetic rehab right now.
Like you will get better cash flow and you're going to build equity.
And I think that's the real important thing.
People look at Burr and they say, oh, I can build equity.
That is definitely true.
but a lot of times that's how you have to generate cash flow too because if you look at a property
with the rents that it can command in its existing condition, you're probably not hitting
that 6 to 9% cash on cash return.
Like I don't see it anywhere.
You can maybe get 3% or 4%, which is okay for some people.
That's fine if you just really want to do nothing.
But if you're trying to hold on to something for a long time, that's why the slow burrow works
because you can do it sort of at a slower pace.
But then you get the equity, but you juice up those.
rents and provide a really high quality experience for your tenants that they're going to want
to stay, that they're willing to pay for. And that just sets you up for a more successful
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Welcome back to the Bigger Pockets podcast. Let's get back into our conversation.
So tell me a little bit about managing these renovations because you're an agent as well.
Are most of the people you're working with local or out of state? The majority is out of state.
It's like 65% out of state versus 40, 45% local.
And how do you coach and get people comfortable with the idea of doing renovations from out of state?
So something started building from the very beginning was our resource list.
And it's at this point, it's 200 plus names and phone numbers of CPAs, attorneys, contractors, electricians.
And so that's really been a huge ticket to, hey, you can build your core four with this resource list.
And I think that's broken down a lot of barriers.
Finding contractors is one of the hardest parts for me at the beginning.
Of course, yeah.
So I ended up getting my builder's license and starting a small handyman slash general contractor
company just to help myself do a lot of these rehabs.
And obviously, clients can use them as well.
So what do out-of-state investors do?
They find a contractor on your list and then they manage the whole thing themselves.
Or like, how are they developing a scope of work and overseeing the project while they're out-of-state?
So we do a lot of boots on the ground for auto-state clients.
So we'll take a really good walk-through video most of the time before purchase.
And that's how they're closing these properties.
And so then after they close, they have that video and they can either hire a GC to just do the whole thing.
Or if they want, they can pick off, you know, one person at a time, hiring my painter, my floor person.
And just do what needs to be done.
Yeah, as an out-of-state investor, that is tough.
It is tough to run subs yourself out-of-state.
I think it's easier to do it with a GC.
or the way of I've done it, I don't know what you recommend, but the way I've done it is my property
manager has a lot of subs and sometimes I will have them run the subs through and help me work
on the scope of work. Do you see people do that as well? Yeah, I'd agree. The GC is the more popular
route and then as well as having the property manager GC. It's especially for the out-of-seater,
that's typically what they're going to favor. And then do you see most out-of-state investors
before they purchase with you? Do they come and visit?
It's like 50-50.
We have a lot of them that will close without ever seeing it,
and then some of them will want to fly in for closing.
But did they ever even come to Detroit and, like, get to know the market at all,
even if they buy the property site unseen?
Yeah, sometimes.
Sometimes they'll want to come in and just confirm that they want to buy here,
and then we'll usually set up some sort of tour from on that week,
and they come in.
We'll go see 10 houses and go from there.
That's my favorite thing to do.
I love going to markets and touring around.
It's the best.
I really recommend people do that if you're an out-of-state investor.
I've closed on property site unseen, but going to the market, just getting a lay in the land,
you know generally where these properties are going to be.
You like this area.
You don't like that area.
It's worth it.
It really is worth $1,000 or whatever you're going to spend.
I know that seems like money you could be putting towards a property and you can, but it's just money
that you need to spend to invest into your business for the longevity of it.
I just know myself, I sleep easier at night investing out of state, knowing that I've been there
and I have a general sense of like, I really like this neighbor.
I trust this neighborhood.
That's like a good place.
I recommend that people take that approach as well.
So, Joe, tell me you've succeeded and had this pretty incredible portfolio that you've built
up over the last couple of years.
What comes next for you?
What are your goals now?
It's a good question because obviously I hit some numbers that were my lifetime goals.
So it's kind of surreal at 31 that could be done.
But my wife and I talk and we both believe in God's purpose for our life.
And he let us know that we're not allowed to go sit on a beach.
So we're brainstorming some philanthropic ideas.
We're going to keep investing.
Oh, that's great.
Keep investing and keep growing.
We're going on a couple side projects with a fintech group
and hopefully have some cool things for investors at some point there.
But yeah, we're just going to keep going and try to make the world a better place.
Oh, that's awesome.
I love to hear that.
And I think that's one of the under-discussed parts of real estate investing that's so cool,
because I'm on board with you.
Like, I'm not someone who could sit on a beach and not work.
But it's so cool how real estate investing when you reach a level of financial independence
just allows you to take on projects that are philanthropic or just have personal importance
or meaning to you or, you know, people often say they want to spend more time with their
family, which is a common one, which is great.
I feel like if you have other professional interests or philanthropic interests, it allows you to take that on as well, which is super cool. So highly respect that that's how you're thinking about spending your time, Joe. Thanks. Well, Joe, thank you so much for being here today. It's been great meeting you here in your story. Congratulations on all the success. Make sure to keep us posted on your next steps.
Awesome. Thanks a lot, Dave. And thank you all so much for listening to this episode of The Bigger Pockets. We appreciate you listening. We'll see you next time for another episode in just a couple of days.
Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
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