BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - You’ve Bought a Few Rentals…Now What?
Episode Date: November 12, 2025You’ve bought a few rental properties…now what? Odds are, like most real estate investors, you’ve got a small portfolio, but you definitely don’t feel “rich” yet. When does the actual w...ealth start coming into play? If you’re in this position, you’re already closer to financial freedom than you think. So, how do you move forward, and what moves do you make to get there faster? Both Dave and Henry have sat down and asked, “So…where’s the money?” years into their real estate investing careers. Now, farther down the line, they’ve created millions in wealth and thousands (if not tens of thousands) in monthly cash flow. This took time, but it also took some pivots. That’s why today, both these experts are laying out how you actually get to your financial end goals even if you feel like you’re not even close. Should you quit your job and go full-time into real estate? Should you reinvest cash flow or pay yourself first? Should you switch strategies if you feel like there’s more money to be made? And what do you do when you feel burnt out on buying rentals? This is how to unlock the real wealth in real estate after your first properties. In This Episode We Cover Yes, you can still reach financial freedom in 10 years with real estate How to use your cash flow to invest faster and get wealthier quicker Why you always need a “job,” even if that means working for yourself How Henry pays his bills while investing (he does not touch the cash flow…yet) The two benefits you must get from your real estate investing strategy (or change it ASAP) What to do when you’re burnt out on investing or dealing with tenants And So Much More! Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/real-estate-1199 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)
So you did it. You bought a property, maybe even two or three of them. And they're even cash flowing.
You listen to us. Great job. Except your life hasn't changed. You're not getting rich.
So where do you go from here? And when do you actually see the payoff in your bank account?
Today, we'll explain how to go from owning your first few properties to actually life-changing wealth with real estate.
Hey, everyone, I'm Dave Meyer, head of real estate investing.
at Bigger Pockets.
And today with me on the show is my friend Henry Washington.
Henry, good to have you here.
What's going on?
What's up, Dave?
Glad to be here.
This is a fun topic because I think we all have this realization at some point.
I know.
I'm surprised it's taken us so long to make a show about this.
Because this is probably maybe one of the most common questions or just dilemmas I think
people have in real estate investing is like you get into the game, which is a huge
accomplishment.
It's probably the hardest part is just getting into the game.
but then you kind of just start asking yourself what comes next. I don't know what I do now. Do I just
keep doing the same thing that I've been doing? Do I try new strategies? Do I diversify? Do I double down? Do I
quit my job? All of these are good questions and it's kind of hard. So I think that's what we're going to
jump into today. I'll just start by asking, did you face this point in your investing career?
Yeah, it was more like a thought process that I was having, but like not voicing out loud.
and then I remember I sat down to lunch with a couple of other investors who were doing more than me and had more property than me.
And I remember one of them said like, so when's the money part happened?
And I was like, oh my God, it's you too.
That's hilarious.
Yeah, 100% had that thought process.
And then it was, I don't know, there was almost like comfort in the discomfort when he said that for sure.
Yeah, I think that's the money part is a big question.
and you sort of run out of cash at some point.
You start talking to other investors who are doing totally different things.
You're like, should I be doing that?
It's the thing that I've been doing.
I think what I realize is when you're doing real estate the way I was doing it
and the way I still do it is I buy distressed, right?
And so like you underwrite your properties to perform a certain way.
And then you buy them not at that level.
And it just takes time for you to get your properties from distressed,
to performance. And remember, I got to 30 doors in like two years. And that's not a lot of time
to get things performing optimally. So I had a, I bought a lot of pain and then it was painful.
Right. And then the tab came to do. It just takes a long time to replace your income with rental
properties. We've talked about on the show all the time. Like on average, I think if you're doing
this consistently, doing it well, you can do it in five, seven years. That's like a realistic
time flame if you're being aggressive about it. If you're a little bit more passive about it,
eight to 12 years, still a fantastic timeline, in my opinion, still way better than anything else
you can do with your time or money. But that's sort of just the reality of it. And so I think
this sort of goes to the point of the show, which is how do you scale knowing that? It sounds like
You said, hey, you know, rental income is great.
That's for later.
Yeah.
Right now, how am I going to live?
You know, what am I going to live off of?
And for you, that decision was flipping.
Yeah.
And that's really the realization that hit me is that, yes, I got into the business thinking,
I'll get enough properties to have enough cash flow to leave my job.
And then the realization hit that, like, I can actually get to the financial freedom.
I'm truly looking for faster if I don't do that.
and I used my experience in real estate to have another more consistent flow of income.
And I know that flipping houses can't be super consistent, but it can be if you are buying deals
consistently and you start systematizing it.
So I know if I buy a deal, that's money in four to six months, right?
So you can plan that out, right?
You just need to be buying deals consistently throughout the year and buying enough.
So it was a little more easy for me to plan out how much money I'll be.
would need to make how many deals I would need to do. And I started to also think about real
estate in these three buckets. Those buckets to me are your growth bucket, which is typically
where people are starting out. And then you've got a bucket of stabilization. And then you got a bucket
of protection. When you're first starting out, you are buying assets, but they're not performing
like you want them to perform because you're buying them under value typically. So you're growing.
It takes money to grow. Right. And so you're typically reinvesting some of that cash.
flow into growing more. And at some point, you'll say, hey, I've got enough volume. I need to focus on
making sure everything's stabilized and performing. And that's when you're taking the money that you
were spending on growth. And now you're spending that money on stabilization and making sure that
your properties are performing. Maybe you're reshuffling some of your assets, selling some,
paying off some other ones, right? And then there's this bucket of protection. And that's where you're
like, all right, I've got the properties. They're performing like I want to. Now I need to start getting as
many of them paid off as possible so that you're actually getting to that real cash flow that you're
looking for, that unlevered cash flow. And across all three of those buckets, you need money to do these
things. And so I said, all right, well, if I'm going to be growing, I need money. If I'm going to be
stabilizing, I need money. And if I'm going to be paying off, I need money. Well, I'll flip houses
to create my income so that I can operate in these three buckets at the right time frame. So now I'm more
operating in the stabilization in the payoff bucket more so than the growth bucket.
I think that framework makes a lot of sense. I have followed a similar pattern where you buy
some stuff that takes a year or two to get it up to performing. Some stuff you are reinvesting
into optimize it. Other stuff you're just trying to pay off. But I think your point about needing
money for all of it is very true. That's just the reality of the situation. You've obviously
chosen to scale by going full time into real estate and generate money from being a flipper
to put into your long-term portfolio. I faced basically the same situation, right? I said,
hey, I've been doing this for a little while, generating some solid cash flow. It is not enough
for me to live off currently, nor is it going to support the lifestyle I desire to get to
in the next couple years because I know people say don't have lifestyle creep, but when
you start at 23, you kind of want some lifestyle.
Because that's not the life I wanted to live for the rest of my life.
I'm sorry.
More importantly, that's probably not the lifestyle your wife wants you to live either.
No, no, absolutely not.
She calls herself a visionary.
I was living in my friend's grandma's basement when we left to save money.
But, yeah, so we needed to do a little better than that.
But so I faced the same question.
You know, I thought about being an agent, not really a flipper.
But then ultimately decided the way I could do.
generate the most income for myself. And my first principle of how I was going to scale was to
stay in my job. I decided to abandon this idea that a lot of people have, and it's not wrong,
that a lot of people in this industry say, I want to quit my job in X years. I want to quit my
job in three years or five years or seven years. I sort of took the opposite approach. I was like,
I'm going to work as long as it takes to hit X dollars a month in real estate and have really
passive income with a good DTI ratio. Like, I'm going to have 50% down on all of them. And once I do that,
I'll stop working. How did that decision go for you? Like, why was your path to scaling through full-time
real estate instead of staying in your job because you had a good career too? Or being an agent,
like, why flipping? I had decided, okay, I know I need income. I can generate income by flipping houses.
I can generate income by education and helping people. And I can generate income by my day job. And so,
like having those three or four streams of income was kind of super helpful to me. And so I kind of
made a mindset shift kind of like you did a couple of years in to go, you know what? Maybe I'll work
a little longer than I was thinking about working because it'll help me grow faster and it'll help
me initially get to the ultimate goal, which is to have enough income to just not have to do
anything else if I don't want to. It will help me get there faster. And so I had decided to go
ahead and continue to work. And what happened was my employer at some point, even though they said
they were okay with me investing on doing my thing on the side, decided that they weren't as okay with it
and wanted me to give them more hours. And when I did the math on what I could make and what I was making
outside of real estate versus what I was making at the job, it just didn't make any sense. It was costing me
money at that point to have my job. And so that's when I made the shift. But I didn't quit until I had to.
I think we sort of skipped over what I would maybe say is the first step in figuring out a scaling
plan, which is probably like setting your own goals, personal financial goals, figuring out what you want.
Whether you're one deal in, five deals in, ten deals in, if you don't really know why you're doing
this and what you're trying to accomplish, you're going to struggle the scale because that's the
whole premise of strategy, right? Strategy is a means of pursuing a goal. If you don't have a goal,
you can't create the strategy. I think you need to create goals when you start. And then I think
you need to reevaluate those goals once you do one to five deals.
100%.
Because you'll learn so much about yourself as an investor in those first few deals.
And you may completely change your mind about exit strategies that you like or you may change
your mind about how you're going to acquire your properties or you may change your mind
about like how many deals you think you want to do.
You could get in and do one and you go, you know what?
Totally.
I don't want to do 10 deals a year.
I want to do two because this was a lot.
And some people make it in there and say, I wanted to do two and I love it.
I need to go and do 10 a year, right?
Like you just need to reevaluate those goals before you really truly work on that scaling plan.
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I think for, I don't know, 95% of investors, this question that Henry and I have been discussing
is the next thing. How are you going to make active income? Because, you know, I've talked
about this in my book, but you got to have money to invest to generate passive income.
You don't just get passive income out of nowhere. You need to invest money. And so for me,
and it sounds like for you, it's like, how are you going to make the most money? Doing something I think
you reasonably enjoy. You know, if you can make a ton of money and you're miserable,
probably not worth it. But if you are in a situation like me where you can have a solid income
and invest it, that's a perfectly fine approach. I think if you want to do what Henry's doing
and go into flipping full time, that's a perfectly fine approach. If you want to become a real
estate agent and you think you can make money doing that, that's a good approach. I think the thing
people get caught up in is assuming and sort of getting confused about being in real estate full
time and where they're getting their active income. Because some people like, should I become an
agent so that I can be a passive investor? To me, those things are sort of unrelated, right? It's like,
if you want to be an agent because you think you'd be good at it or you think you'd enjoy it or
you think you can make a lot of money doing it, great. That can help your investing career. And don't
get me wrong, being an agent can help you find great deals and you'll learn the industry. But
if you're going to hate being an agent, you absolutely do not need to be in real estate full time
to be an investor. You could do what I do or what honestly the majority of Bigger Pockets community
does, which is just keep working at their regular job and invest. But I think whatever you do,
whichever decision you make, if you're trying to figure out, if you're feeling stuck and where
you're going to scale, making this decision, at least for the next three years, you can always change
it, but the next three or so years will really help solidify your next steps because you'll know
where that money is going to come from, at what rate it's going to come in. And that will help you
decide, I can afford X number of deals per year. I can afford this kind of property per year.
If you don't have that basis of where the capital is coming from, it's just a guess. You're just
kind of making it up. It's all hypothetical. And like I said, the active income can be in real
estate. But I think sometimes people confuse house flipping and being a landlord as these passive
strategies. Like house flipping is a job. Now, you, you.
You can remove yourself from different parts of that job, right?
You can have a project manager who manages your renovations.
You can have a general contractor who does that for you or you can do all those things
yourself.
But like, trust me, if you take your finger off the pulse of any part of the business, whether
you're doing it or somebody else is doing it, you will not make money.
I think the other thing about, I just wanted to add about active income is that it also
takes away that pressure to be like, oh, my cash flow this month was only $100 instead of $300.
$100 a month. If you are quit your job prematurely or you are expecting to live off of your cash flow
immediately, those times when expenses hit, when a radiator breaks, like, you're frustrated, you're
stressed. If you know I'm making active income and that's what I'm living off and I'm going to
invest the excess money that I make into my portfolio, at least in my experience, I don't know about
you, it takes a little bit of the pressure off. Like, it still stinks. Like you don't want these huge
expenses, but if you make $500 a month versus $2,000 a month in a given month because of expenses,
it softens the bloke.
You're like, I wasn't going to live off of that.
And I'll make it up in the next three months when I have less expenses.
Here's what I think people forget.
Like, when you underwrite a rental property, yes, you're underwriting it to cover your
capital expenses because we know a roof's going to go bad at some point.
We know an HVAC's going to go bad at some point, right?
So you're like, well, you should be putting money away for capital expenses.
And you should be putting money away from maintenance.
you're right, you should. But what happens if you underwrite a property to perform a certain way,
you buy that property and then one month in, your HVAC goes out? You hadn't put away enough money
on the side from your income coming in off that property to cover your HVAC yet. You've only
put away a couple hundred dollars, but your HVAC is going to cost you six to eight grand. Where's
that going to come from? So if you're truly going to live off of your cash flow, you need a lump sum
of cash or you need to be in a position where you have operated your portfolio for a couple of years
long enough to have put away enough of your rental income into your maintenance or savings account
so that when those expenses come up, you can cover them. Yeah. That happened to me, my second rental
property. The HVAC went out literally the week after I closed on it and I had to come up with five grand.
And it felt like all my cash flow got eaten up. It didn't. We underwrote it to cover that. But you're not
really going to see that until years end. Does that make sense? I totally agree with that.
So we've talked about in scaling, super common issue that everyone has. You know, starting with
setting your goals, super important. When do you want to stop working? What are you doing this for? How long is
your time horizon? What level of risk are you going to take? Think about that stuff. Then go on to
how you're going to generate active income, unless you have a boatload of cash. We can just go buy stuff
for cash and stop listening to us. Why are you here? Also, be a private lender for me.
me. But if you're not one of those people, figure out your active income. Then, though, I think
there's this question of strategy. Like, okay, I have my active income. What types of deals should I do?
What kind of operations should I set up? I still have this. I'm going to just be honest. I'm always
kind of thinking about this. But it's not that useful to always be imagining, oh, should I be a
flip or should I be doing this? So like how do you make sense of that? How do you hone in on out of all the
amazing different ways that you can scale a portfolio? Like how do you pick the one that's right for you?
I think when you're picking a strategy, you have to consider exactly what you said, your goals and then
the time frame in which you're trying to get to your goals, right? Because you need to pick a strategy
that's going to monetarily help you get to that goal in the time frame that you choose. The cool part
about real estate guys is that all of these real estate strategies make money. You can make money in
single family. You can make money in multifamily. You can make money in commercial. Some you can make
money faster than others. And there's pros and there's cons to all of it. Right. But how do you stray from like,
hey, I should be going and doing this because I can make money faster. I should be going to do this.
It's so cool. And so how, what keeps me grounded is you need to pick a strategy that will monetarily help
you get to your goals in the time frame and trying to get to them. And then you also need to pick a
strategy that gives you what I call the warm fuzzies, right? So for me, I don't just invest in single and
small multifamily real estate because it makes me money. Yes, it makes me money, but I invest in
single and small multifamily real estate because it gives me the warm fuzzies because I love
that single and small multifamily real estate allows me to help people more within my investing
strategy because single and small multifamily real estate is more about the people. It's personal,
Yeah. When you get into a larger multifamily real estate, it's about a P&L. It's a business, right? You have to, you have to decrease in OI, right? You're trying to make the property more profitable. And you've probably taken other people's money to do the deal. And so now you have this obligation to those investors to get them the best return. And so, with single and small multifamily real estate, I can be at the expense of people, right? Companies do it all the time. I have to get my investors the best return. That means I need to lay off these people, right? And so with single and small multifamily real estate, I can be flat.
because it's less risky. I can buy a house. I was on a phone with the seller this morning. And he was like,
I need to sell this house. I need to get the cash. But I also need to find a place for my son to live.
And I said, great, well, I can buy the house. I can close in seven days. You can have your money.
And we'll just let them live there for 90 days. I won't charge you a thing. I can do that.
Does that cost me money? Yeah, it costs me a little bit of money. But I can do a couple of things.
I can either underwrite that into the deal and pay less for it. Or I can just eat that cost. It's only a few hundred
bucks a month that I'm losing out on, but it gives that family the peace of mind and the,
and the convenience that they need. And it makes me feel good that I'm able to do that for people.
I love that. Like, I can just be helpful to people more in this space because it's less risky,
and it's a more people-focused niche. It makes me feel good. And so when I see a new,
shiny object in real estate, you know, right now, people are loving RV parks, you know,
two years ago it was Airbnbs. And, you know, there's always going to be a shiny,
new thing. And I don't stray to those shiny new things because typically they don't have the same
warm, fuzzy feeling that I get from what I do. And so I can stay focused. I know I'm going to hit my
financial goals. I know that what I'm doing has an impact on other people. And that helps me feel good.
And that keeps me going when things get hard because every investing strategy you try is going to get
hard at some point. And it's so easy to give up when things get harder to pivot to something else when
things get hard, but when you're doing it for reasons beyond just the money, you won't necessarily
be looking to just get out of a strategy because it's harder. You'll be looking about, well, how do I
figure out how to make this strategy work in the time that I'm in because I'm doing it for more than
just money? But that's me. That's how I do. I love that. No, I think it's an amazing way to think
about it and really commendable to one, look for mutual benefit. I think this is just such an
important part of being a real estate investor is finding ways, yeah, to earn a return.
This is your business. You, you know, you deserve to earn a profit for the effort that you're
putting into it. But if you're doing the business right, you should be able to do it in a way
where you're also helping the sellers that you work with, the tenants that you have,
the agents, the contractors, everyone in the whole ecosystem can benefit. This is not a zero-sum
industry. And so I think just thinking about it from that perspective is awesome and should be
the way that everyone in the bigger pockets community is thinking about how they're approaching
real estate. And the second thing is true is like you have to like what you're doing. Otherwise,
all these people, you know, you get into this industry rightfully. I think many people do because
they want to quit your job. But if you start up going and doing real estate deals that you don't like,
you're going to want to quit that too. So what's the point of being in real estate if you're just
going to hate it and want to quit it anyway? So finding something that is personally fulfilling
to you, like, you know, I am dabbling and flipping. It's not.
something I think I'll ever love. But like when I see you do it or I see James Dainer do it,
like you guys just like really enjoy it. Like it's, it's cool to see people do that. There are people
who are way, way better short-term rental operators than I am who are really good and care a lot
about hospitality and guest experience. And that's super cool. And I think that's a great way to
start filtering down all the types of deals you can do in real estate. It's just what do you like?
What are you attracted to? And maybe you do need to do a couple of.
of those deals to see which ones you like.
I did a short-term rental.
I was like, I'm never going to do this again.
I still have it, but it was so much work.
I was like, this is just not worth it to me.
And I learned.
I think that's a great sort of framework to look at scaling.
I have one that I often advise people on,
because I guess people often ask me like,
oh, should I go into a lot of different markets?
Because I'm always talking about markets.
And so people are asking me that question a lot.
Or, you know, I've done long-term.
should I try flipping? I'll say two things about this. First, you don't have to. There is nothing wrong
with just sticking with what you're good at. And although I have deviated at certain points in my
career, I've kind of come back to just investing in the same kind of stuff. And even though I do a lot of
passive investing now, I do passive investing in residential real estate. I don't do it in retail or
self-storage or industrial or warehouses. It's the thing I know. I don't want to learn anything new.
I'm too old for that.
No, I, no, I just, I'm sticking with what I know because I feel like I'm good at it and there's nothing wrong with that.
But if you are going to expand and diversify, which is also not wrong, I recommend one of two ways to do it.
I call it horizontal or vertical scaling.
Horizontal is sort of what I've done, which is like try different markets and invest in different markets, but keep your strategy the same.
You know, so I invest in small, multifamily and single family.
I do that in multiple different markets across the country, but I'm keeping one of those two
things, the market or the strategy, the same.
You know, I don't want to change both of those at the same time.
I wouldn't start flipping in Los Angeles.
I wouldn't start a self-storage facility in Raleigh, because that's a new strategy and a new
market.
That's a little too much risk for me.
The other option, which I think you've done, or I think James Dainer, another good
example of this is like going all in on your market. Just be an expert at your market. And then
you can be very opportunistic about what deals you do in that market. Because like you, you can
flip a house. You could do a short-term rental. You could do a mid-term rental. You could do a any of those.
You have all of those because you're so good at your market. So I think you need to sort of pick,
either be really good at one market or be really good at one strategy. And you can sort of work
towards the other one, but trying to change both at the same time to me as a big red flag.
That is fantastic advice.
I don't think I've heard it said that way before, but that makes a ton of sense because you're
really just hedging your risk, right?
You're choosing to leverage your superpower, right?
And so either your superpower is that you understand your strategy wholeheartedly and you feel
like you can copy and paste in a market or your superpower is, I understand my market so well
that I can do multiple strategies here.
That's just smart investing.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of people want to make a pivot.
and that's okay, I would just recommend moving towards it in steps. Just as an example, I started
investing in the Midwest. And yeah, I want to do bigger burs. You know, like that's kind of the goal.
I think that's a great way to make money out there. The first deal I bought was pretty close to
stabilize and I did a cosmetic one because like I knew I could handle that in a different market.
And I thought, I'll meet some contractors. I'll test my team out. And then the next one will do a
little bit bigger. And the next one I'll do a little bit bigger. And I get the idea that you want to hit
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portfolio on a 15, 20 year timeline. I'm like, you know, realistically to hit my goals, I'm going to have to
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to reduce risk and figure out the right path for me to scale, to learn which is going to be the
sustainable path for me. That's just, that's just worth it. Yeah. I agree. So we got to take one more
quick break. But when we come back, we're going to talk about the motivation to keep
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Welcome back to the bigger pockets podcast.
Henry and I are here talking about scaling, and it's just such a common challenge.
There's no one who gets through this.
100% of real estate investors have this challenge.
Henry and I both presented frameworks of how we think about scaling.
I love your way of thinking about which things to pick, by the way.
But I want to talk less tactically and more just kind of mindset thing,
because you mentioned it earlier.
When you're not living off your cash flow, when you want to get into this to maybe retire early, but you're still years from retiring or something hard happens.
How do you mentally stick with it?
Or like, what are your tricks to staying motivated even when you're still a few years from getting the full benefit?
Yeah.
And you're having to work a good amount to make progress towards that goal.
What I think happens is we get fatigued, right?
Because deals are hard.
The market gets hard.
The work gets hard and tedious.
And so what I do is I think about, right, like, what's the end look like? And if I'm in a place where I feel like I want the end to be sooner than later, like it's just a math problem. So I can look at my current portfolio now and I can say, all right, Henry, if you want out and you don't want to have to work, what can you do with what you have to get there faster? So I can literally look at my portfolio. I can look at my equity positions and I can say, all right, well, how many of these properties?
paid off give me X amount of cash, right? And so I can say, all right, well, maybe I don't want
hundreds of doors. Maybe I just want 10 paid off houses. I have enough equity that if I sold most
of it, I can probably just pay off 10 properties. And then I don't have to do anything anymore.
And the average home in the U.S. right now, if you had 10 paid off single family homes, you would make
20 grand a month in tax-advantaged cash flow. Ten properties. That's it. A lot less head
Yeah. So when you're feeling overwhelmed and you've got a portfolio, I can literally look at it and go, you know what?
If I, it'll be a pain in the butt to start selling a bunch of properties. Sure.
Sure. It'll take me probably a year, right, to fully exit everything. And then I can have 10 paid off houses producing 20 grand a month. And then I can, you know, walk off into the sunset or I can decide to do more deals.
Come play golf. Yes. You've got these options, right? And so I guess my answer to your question is when I start feeling like that, I'm like, look, if I want out, I can get out.
out. Will it be a little bit of a pain in the butt? Sure. Yeah. Is that really what I want, though? And
typically what I realize is, no, I want to keep going, right? I want to keep going. And things will be
fine. But there's comfort in knowing that if I want out, if I truly want out, I can get out.
I like that a lot. It's a really good thing to keep in mind. I have a couple other things I'll
share that I personally do when it gets hard. And one is, I think what your point about the
warm and fuzzies is true, like, you can get rid of property. I've sold properties that's just a
headache, even if it's a good property, because it's just stressing me out. And that's not why I got
into this. And so, like, you can call your portfolio anytime you want. I think that's a really
important thing. Personally, a couple years ago, I made a decision that while I was still working, I was only
going to spend 20 hours a month on real estate.
Like I just start setting rules for myself about 20 hours a month.
Like that's a rule I set for myself just to keep things normal so that I'm remembering
that like, yeah, I'm working hard for this long term goal.
I've been doing it for 15 years.
But like I'm not going to let this consume me and be obsessed about it so that I don't
have a good life right now.
And you have to do that at the beginning.
Like I grind it.
I'd self-managed.
I'd fix things myself for years when I didn't have capital.
But I encourage people as they go.
through their investing career to just think about how to make it sustainable. Even if you have to
make less money on every deal, just find systems that make it sustainable for you. I buy a lot of
on-market deals. I pay property managers to do things for me. Yes, I earn lower return, but this is why
my strategy is I'm doing this for 20 years and I'm going to keep working. So it doesn't matter to me.
I'm like, I have to make this sustainable for myself and something that I still enjoy. In 15 years into
it, I still enjoy it because I've sort of put these guardrails in place for myself. So,
So that's number one.
Number two, it is totally fine to just stop for a while.
If you just don't want to do a deal for a year, don't.
I've gone years without doing deals.
Like, just don't.
I, like, it's fine.
This is especially, you know, I know in your situation, I mean, if you're flipping, it's different.
But if you were working full time and you're like, I'm just busy.
That's totally fine.
Actually, this summer I was looking at a bunch of deals.
And I just texted my agent.
I was like, you know what?
I'm just super busy for like the next four months, just stops.
sending me stuff. I'll, like, I'll get back to you this winter. And they're like, okay,
okay, fine. Like, I don't have to do it. You know, it's just, it's up to you. So I think that's
really big. And then the third one is, honestly, in the last few years, I've found a tremendous
amount of comfort in just like having more friends in real estate. You know, for the first
couple of years I was doing this, I was the only person I knew who invested in real estate.
And it's kind of lonely. But I can't even tell you all.
the amount of hours Henry and I have just complained to each other about real estate investing
or, you know, shared wins with each other or with all of our other friends in the bigger pockets
community, it really does matter and it really does help. So I think if you haven't gone to a meetup
in your community, if you haven't made any friends in your neighborhood or acquaintances in your
market, I encourage people to do that. Even if you're not doing deals, I think it's just good way
to sort of make this more sustainable. Absolutely. Well, this has been a great conversation.
I just want to stress to everyone that if you have faced this dilemma and question of how to scale,
how to keep going in your investing career, everyone does.
This is just part of it.
Whether you're in real estate or anything that is entrepreneurial, it's hard.
It can be lonely at certain points.
So, you know, there are tactical things.
We've given you tactical advice on what you can do.
But also just remember that this is something you're doing for yourself.
You don't have to be doing it and just find ways, I think, to make it sustainable.
The more longevity you give yourself in the industry, the more probability you're going to have to be successful.
And as Henry said, feel warm and fuzzy about it.
So that's what we're in it for.
That's right.
And look, if you are in the Midwest or in the Northwest Arkansas market and you're just tired and thinking about getting out and wanting to sell some properties, then you just reach out to Davey.
We can help you with that.
We would be happy to do.
Yeah, exactly.
Or if you're one of those super rich people who just has all this money that they wanted to play, just call us.
Give us a call.
Awesome.
Well, thanks, man.
I appreciate you being here.
This was a lot of fun.
Thank you.
And thank you all for listening to this episode of Bigger Pockets podcast.
We'll see you next to that.
Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast.
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