People I bump into often say “why Real Estate”? Why not stocks or bitcoin, or precious metals or some other hot investment sector?
Well, because Real Estate requires a different mindset is what it really comes down to.
People who get excited about stocks, or bitcoin or gold futures or other shorter term investments are often looking for quick gratification. Note the qualifier there, often.
Sure there are many people using stocks and mutual funds for long term retirement, but they rarely are the ones getting all excited about the next big thing.
These long term visionaries are much closer to being Real Estate investors than they realize.
Why Real Estate?
The simple answer is that it’s one of the simplest most consistent ways to grow your money over the long term.
It actually acts as a hedge against inflation due to property values being driven up by inflation.
You might think of property as a boat at sea and inflation as the ocean. As inflation rises, or the ocean in my example, property values get raised up as well much like the boat on the ocean.
A properly chosen property creates cash flow that can assist you moving forward whether it’s to retirement or as an income supplement.
Perhaps the best part is your tenants are paying down your mortgage every month helping you create more equity and putting you in a more secure position the longer you own it.
Are there challenges associated with Real Estate? Obviously, it’s why many of you are here reading this.
Why Real Estate Isn’t For Everyone
It’s often these challenges that become excellent excuses for people to not invest in Real Estate. After all, isn’t it far easier to simply trust the bank with your retirement funds?
And that’s the crux of the problem. People choose easy rather than smart options. They don’t do their own homework, their own research and they simply hand their dreams and hopes off to someone “more experienced” with investments.
So Real Estate isn’t for everyone, it’s for people who are in it for the long haul. People who are willing to put in some work to manage and maintain their properties. People who are a lot like you who come tot this site to get some insights, learn a few tips and maybe pick up some new ideas to help you become even more educated about your landlord business.
So thank you for not being everyone, but rather for being eager to learn and interested in being educated about what you’re doing.
It seems perfect. The nice little turnkey rental property that the current landlord is selling comes complete with tenants. A puzzle perfectly coming together

Now depending on where you live there may not be penalties for breaking mortgages early, but in most places if you break that mortgage contract you could be on the hook for a few months interest payments or the entire potential interest rate differential the lender is losing out on which can be significant if it’s early in a mortgage.
This is basically the same advice you would follow before you fill a vacant property. You want to get it painted, patched and cleaned so it shows well and it sells faster.
If you know you’re selling shortly start watching the market, especially for similar properties in the same area.
Why would you keep it a secret? Tell other investors, tell your friends, tell everyone!
This one can be tricky, as everyone’s strengths are different, but in my case one of my strengths is marketing. So I wrote all the ads for the properties listed on the MLS.
Once you start down the course of planning on selling your investment property, what’s your plan? Are you putting the money in a new investment? Will the loss of cash flow affect you going forward and/or will you be able to replace it or survive without it?
But I’ll be losing out on rent each month and I’ll have to pay the expenses out of my pocket while it’s vacant!!! That’s the typical response I get from people when I tell them to vacate the property and it’s true.

