I had someone say the new 12 month seasoning with Freddie Mac for investment properties that BRRRR is next to impossible now. Would love to have perspective on that.
I've been thinking the same thing. BRRRR doesn't work in a hot market, like the last couple of years. But now that you can buy at a discount and rates are high, if you can account for that and the numbers work, it will be a great strategy. The important thing is to assume it will be 2-3 years before rates are significantly lower.
Killer explanation on how a BRRRR deal works with actual numbers to illustrate. Armed with this info, I have a few potentials in my area I can make a move on.
No strategy ever dies, every strategy has to be able to be fluid to conditions. If you feel it’s dead find someone who is still working it and find out what they shifted.
So you but the second one with the equity you get back but you need to pay interest on that equity and if you use it as a down payment you need to pay interest too, plus the interest on the first mortgage, I think I am loss, is this the way is works?
Question for you James, how much do you like to see in monthly cash flow on a single family home when brrrr-ing? In this market with rents possibly falling would you want more cushion? Edit* saw you sort of answered my question at the end. Very interesting you will accept to break even for a couple years, good info thanks.
I know some investors get construction loans based on future value. Basically covers cost of rehab and fixer with 20-30 percent down. My understanding is that hard money loans are 80 percent of fixer price and investor covers cost of rehab. Would someone expain, please
That’s a beautiful old house. If it’s in a national register historic district, it’s likely also eligible for historic preservation tax credits. No one ever talks about those.
Is there a such thing as operating expenses in your underwriting? Love your videos normally but am confused by how you can say you’re cash flowing 600 dollars in two years with a strong assumptions rates will go down and without factoring in any OE in your breakdown.
Homes that are over $400K are hit the hardest right now and no one can afford to buy one or rent one. Every investor I've talked to has talked about this.
Tons of variables on this, hard money, conventional- you have a lot of options depending on your strategy and length of investing (can you count rents towards income), connect with your CPA and build a relationship with your lender
Does it really take 12-15 weeks to get a permit pulled and paid for? I work for a remodeling contractor in Iowa and here it takes 2 weeks tops. Am I missing something?
And KEEP GOING until you've reached the monthly passive income you need to live FINANCIALLY FREE! Build a team and have systems in place. Love the BRRRR.
Construction loan? Ugh, the worst. Labor inflated. Materials inflated. Average income won't qualify. Selling 75% below appraised = reach. Real inflation =18%, Irates =7%, what $?
@@ProjectRE high interest, never all at once, releases $ slowly, must meet constant scrutiny checks. If cash on cash or IRR isn't at least 25%, are you just losing $ more slowly with taxes/inflation?
I don’t see the problem with having higher rates. If anything that’s an opportunity for new investors to get in the game, if they’re willing to increase there income. (Yes I said willing) 😊
This strategy assumes you have 100% occupancy in all the rental properties. What if you buy 3 or 4 rental properties and then your tenants decides to move out…how will you cover the mortgage? this is a recipe for disaster if you are not prepared for the worst case scenario.
It's possible that some people don't have the down-payment, so renting is the best choice. Or the renter will have a friend or family member taking on some of the rent, thus lowering the price. There's probably other scenarios I can't think of, but I get what you're saying, though.
I had someone say the new 12 month seasoning with Freddie Mac for investment properties that BRRRR is next to impossible now. Would love to have perspective on that.
I've been thinking the same thing. BRRRR doesn't work in a hot market, like the last couple of years. But now that you can buy at a discount and rates are high, if you can account for that and the numbers work, it will be a great strategy. The important thing is to assume it will be 2-3 years before rates are significantly lower.
💯
So do you wait to refi till the rates go down? Or refi twice?
Killer explanation on how a BRRRR deal works with actual numbers to illustrate. Armed with this info, I have a few potentials in my area I can make a move on.
Thanks!!!
No strategy ever dies, every strategy has to be able to be fluid to conditions. If you feel it’s dead find someone who is still working it and find out what they shifted.
💯 pivot with the market!
Close on permitting is a great idea. Love that! 🍀 Thank you!!
Thanks Susan 🙌🏽
So you but the second one with the equity you get back but you need to pay interest on that equity and if you use it as a down payment you need to pay interest too, plus the interest on the first mortgage, I think I am loss, is this the way is works?
Question for you James, how much do you like to see in monthly cash flow on a single family home when brrrr-ing? In this market with rents possibly falling would you want more cushion?
Edit* saw you sort of answered my question at the end. Very interesting you will accept to break even for a couple years, good info thanks.
This dude always brings value.
Thanks Michael!!!
This content is sooo good. Step by step plan how to set yourself up to win.
Thank you 🙌🏽
6:19 This is one of the things I’m doing to make sure I survive 2023! I just posted a video about the tweaks I’m making in my own strategy as well.
Great vid James!
appreciate it
Thanks Julio!
Awesome video.
Thanks!
I know some investors get construction loans based on future value. Basically covers cost of rehab and fixer with 20-30 percent down. My understanding is that hard money loans are 80 percent of fixer price and investor covers cost of rehab. Would someone expain, please
That’s a beautiful old house. If it’s in a national register historic district, it’s likely also eligible for historic preservation tax credits. No one ever talks about those.
The moncler jacket is fire lol
😂 thanks! Cash flow paid for it!
Is there a such thing as operating expenses in your underwriting? Love your videos normally but am confused by how you can say you’re cash flowing 600 dollars in two years with a strong assumptions rates will go down and without factoring in any OE in your breakdown.
Super helpful
I think I ran past you in Newport beach a week or two ago.
Next time say hi!
How do you work the numbers backwards?
Do u have to do a ADU ? Or just rent an extra room?
Adu would be more income then a room, depends on the project. If it’s down to studs already it’s easier to add a ADU then cosmetic.
Can this work in California?
Yes! In numerous areas
Homes that are over $400K are hit the hardest right now and no one can afford to buy one or rent one. Every investor I've talked to has talked about this.
Market depending, our $400k market is more of the $600-750k fixers
Doesn’t it ruin your credit if you refinance all the homes? Refinancing is part of the brrrr process
Tons of variables on this, hard money, conventional- you have a lot of options depending on your strategy and length of investing (can you count rents towards income), connect with your CPA and build a relationship with your lender
Does it really take 12-15 weeks to get a permit pulled and paid for? I work for a remodeling contractor in Iowa and here it takes 2 weeks tops. Am I missing something?
Really depends on the city. In Chicago it can take longer than the 12 to 15 weeks mentioned.
City specific and scope of work specific. Each city has their own requirements
And KEEP GOING until you've reached the monthly passive income you need to live FINANCIALLY FREE! Build a team and have systems in place. Love the BRRRR.
Construction loan? Ugh, the worst.
Labor inflated. Materials inflated.
Average income won't qualify.
Selling 75% below appraised = reach.
Real inflation =18%, Irates =7%, what $?
What kind of loan are you talking about? Intrust Funding fund these in 48 hours. Asset backed
@@ProjectRE high interest, never all at once, releases $ slowly, must meet constant scrutiny checks. If cash on cash or IRR isn't at least 25%, are you just losing $ more slowly with taxes/inflation?
I don’t see the problem with having higher rates. If anything that’s an opportunity for new investors to get in the game, if they’re willing to increase there income. (Yes I said willing) 😊
Just have to off set the debt costs with a lower price, more to look at 👀
This strategy assumes you have 100% occupancy in all the rental properties. What if you buy 3 or 4 rental properties and then your tenants decides to move out…how will you cover the mortgage? this is a recipe for disaster if you are not prepared for the worst case scenario.
Write in a standard vacancy rate in your pro forma to account for this, every are has an average. But yes, vacancy goes into our underwriting
1:00 whoops forgot Rent
Good thing your broker is checking the Bitcoin chart
Is there a mental laziness in the phrase: X is dead, meaning BRRRR is dead, SEO is dead, social media is dead, content is dead....
who pays 4,000 in rent.. can just buy a house for that monthly payment
It's possible that some people don't have the down-payment, so renting is the best choice. Or the renter will have a friend or family member taking on some of the rent, thus lowering the price. There's probably other scenarios I can't think of, but I get what you're saying, though.
Some people rent because of their credit scores, some are immigrants and can't purchase properties for some time
That's easy in NYC
Not on this street! This house is on one of the best n. Everett streets. But does depend on the location
Home ownership is a lot of responsibility. Upkeep can be costly. It is not for everyone, therefore some individuals are renters for life.
Would you be brave enough to walk up those stairs?
😂 solid!
Stop buying in metro areas. Try rural, go out of state. People don't realize how much damage you can do if you have Chicago money going into Alabama.
Or, you live with several roommates-again California.
The city has COME in*