Your Real Estate Plan Has To Work For You
I received some great feedback on the recent video about having a plan, (if you didn’t watch it, you may want to jump over here first, You Need A Plan). But there’s more to it.
It seems in the last week, people have just been appearing out of no where asking me questions about getting into Real Estate investing. And they’re not just asking me, they are asking other people they know as well. Which is great, but they are getting different answers everywhere they go, which is a problem.
As an example, a friend I just talked to the other day talked to another landlord friend who has about eight properties, so this other landlord is obviously is pretty serious about it. He’s sold all of his up down suites in high demand rental areas and bought single family properties in better neighborhoods.
He had quite a few of them previously and due to headaches of having extra tenants and managing properties further a field, he’s changed what he’s doing. He has a new plan. And that’s great, but it’s his plan!
This other landlord owns another business which has employees and his time is occupied with his main money earner, his company. I can see why he would want less tenants and to move things closer and simpler.
Now I don’t actually know him, but I would suggest his goal is to create a nice side retirement nest egg for himself with the rental properties and they also make a safe simple investment. The bulk of his time has to be devoted to his thriving business which is the real money earner and the real retirement vehicle.
This is significantly different than someone who may be considering turning Real Estate investing into their career.
Again I Say, You Need Your Own Plan
If your intent is to buy a property or two as an investment, keep it fairly hands off and simple and your goal is to simply pay the mortgage down over time and have a retirement nest egg in 25 or 30 years, maybe a single family property closer to you is the way to go.
When you’re buying an investment property, you just have to understand the trade offs and what suits you.
With a single family home for example, you lose in the following areas.
- Overall Cash Flow is Lower
- Smaller Base Of Renters For This Type of Property
- Longer Periods of Vacancy
Cashflow is usually just a few hundred dollars more than expenses on single family homes (unless you’ve owned it for many many years). The types of tenants that can afford to rent a whole house, also typically have enough income to purchase, so this subset of renters make up a smaller percent of the total base of renters actively looking for places to live. And you end up with longer periods of vacancy due to having a smaller base of renters.
The positive trade off is often they are better tenants and this equates to less headaches and/or time. If that’s what your goal is then this may fit your plan.
For someone with high income, and little time who is looking at this as a long term investment (15 years plus), this may be an ideal plan for investing in Real Estate.
But what if your goal is to get out of the job you have and not have to worry about income from your job? What if, like me, you intended to make Real Estate investing your full time career? Or at least a huge portion of your retirement nest egg? Then you need a different plan.
Then you need to focus on cashflow, because cash flow is what makes the rental market flourish for a landlord. When you have an up down suite or a side by side duplex with two incomes and you’re generating $500 per month of cashflow, or $800 or even $1,000 on one single property it takes a considerable amount of pressure off the amount of income you earn independent of your Real Estate..
It also gives you space to manoeuvre if the rental market slows down. And it will slow down. It might not be this year, or the next year, but in most areas the Real Estate market is cyclical. That single family home you were making a couple hundred dollars off of works fantastic when vacancy rates are 2 or 3%, but when they push up to 6 or 7%, rents start slipping down due to competition. If you’re in Detroit, well all bets are off.
Preparing For Downturns
With a $1,000 monthly cashflow dropping rents on two units by $200 each makes you more competitive and still gives you some nice cashflow. Even on $500 cash flow, losing $400 will be painful, but you’re still positive and if you lose one person, you’re not having to cover the full payment yourself.
With a solid plan, you have a plan B, a contingency to deal with these scenarios. Raising and lowering rents and still surviving is an option.
With a single family home the amount you can cut is much lower and with higher vacancies due to a smaller rental pool having your property vacant for two, three or even four months can be a killer. When you only have $100 or maybe $300 cash flow in good times, you better have lots of extra income to support it, but maybe that’s part of your plan?
So obviously I’m biased, but I’ve seen what works. I’ve been through sub 1% vacancy rates and vacancy rates around 8%. I’ve had tenants offering to take places unseen during low vacancy periods and I’ve had properties languish for months vacant during the last downturn. Through it all I’ve recognized that cash flow is indeed king and it’s a recurring theme I push on this site to new landlords.
Ultimately though, it comes down to your plan. Some of it’s your comfort levels. Some is your available time and where you eventually want to be with it. If you don’t have the time to manage extra rental units, maybe you need to be prepared to hire property managers. If you’re investment window is 30 years, it’s about the end result not what’s happening right now, so you have to plan accordingly.
The important part being the planning. In some upcoming articles I’ll talk about renting out condos and other types of rental properties. If you have some thoughts on this though, I’d love to hear them!