The Entrepreneur Forum | Financial Freedom | Starting a Business | Motivation | Money | Success

Welcome to the only entrepreneur forum dedicated to building life-changing wealth.

Build a Fastlane business. Earn real financial freedom. Join free.

Join over 80,000 entrepreneurs who have rejected the paradigm of mediocrity and said "NO!" to underpaid jobs, ascetic frugality, and suffocating savings rituals— learn how to build a Fastlane business that pays both freedom and lifestyle affluence.

Free registration at the forum removes this block.

How much positve cashflow is typical?

Rawr

Gold Contributor
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
95%
Aug 12, 2007
1,838
1,755
south florida
A couple of friends told me today they are giving up their places for rent. One is renting out his house, another one each room in a 3 room condo.

They came up with these numbers = +150/mth for the house and +250 mnth for condo.

I have no idea if this is good/bad or ugly? How does one decide what he need to make in profit on a place? House/apartment/etc?


Additionally - it seems to me that apartment units is where the money is. having 10 identical cheap apartments that are easy to repair looks like a gravy train. Is this about right? whats the best way to go about it? Should I get 10-15 people in on a deal and buy bulk?
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

J P D

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Nov 6, 2007
59
6
Chicago, Il
Any cash flow is better than nothing. The two unit I just bought cash flows about 175 a month after all expenses, and that's at current rents. Also factor in my 3% down, which changes my monthly mtg payment thus changing my cash flow figure. If I had put 10% down, my cash flow would look different. So there are lots to consider when looking at cash flow figures. As long as the property is paying for itself it shouldn't be a bad investment, as long as everything else is in order. RE fortunes aren't made off of monthly rental cash flow though.
 

andviv

Gold Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
40%
Jul 27, 2007
5,361
2,143
Washington DC
Additionally - it seems to me that apartment units is where the money is. having 10 identical cheap apartments that are easy to repair looks like a gravy train. Is this about right? whats the best way to go about it? Should I get 10-15 people in on a deal and buy bulk?


Read this review for the book: [ame="http://www.amazon.com/How-Buy-Sell-Apartment-Buildings/dp/0471653438/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1198679233&sr=8-1"]How to buy and sell apartment buildings[/ame] by Vollucci. In the review I made a post about chapter 3, you may be interested on that one, but I do recommend you read the whole book.
 

Reisteve

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Dec 6, 2007
20
2
JScott is right....

You have to look at ALL the numbers...

As well as the condition of the property, and the market...

I have two breakeven properties... but both have a lot of equity because of where they are located.

I have a couple that flow, but the equity is not near as good.

You have to take in the whole picture.

Make Sense?

Steve
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Jakko

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
53%
Sep 2, 2007
66
35
RE fortunes aren't made off of monthly rental cash flow though.

I am assuming that usually real estate investors invest in the market because they want to retire off of the passive income that is generated by their properties.

I guess some start out with a SFR or a fourplex, and when they have some equity in the property, they upgrade and 1031 exchange into a better property. They often keep repeating this process untill they can get into a big apartment building with more than 200 units which would ultimately be able to create the passive income that is needed for them to retire. So if monthly cash flow isn't key in the long run, then what is?

Also, approximately how long do you guys think it would take for an average investor to start off with a SFR and turn it into an apartment building that can generate enough cash flow which would allow that person to retire? He would do it using 1031 exchange but this person has only one source income which is his job so he can only put limited amount of money into his investments. Do you think doing it this way would be slow? It would take at least 10 years probably?
 

Bilgefisher

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
17%
Aug 29, 2007
1,815
308
Aurora, Co
I am assuming that usually real estate investors invest in the market because they want to retire off of the passive income that is generated by their properties.

I guess some start out with a SFR or a fourplex, and when they have some equity in the property, they upgrade and 1031 exchange into a better property. They often keep repeating this process untill they can get into a big apartment building with more than 200 units which would ultimately be able to create the passive income that is needed for them to retire. So if monthly cash flow isn't key in the long run, then what is?

Also, approximately how long do you guys think it would take for an average investor to start off with a SFR and turn it into an apartment building that can generate enough cash flow which would allow that person to retire? He would do it using 1031 exchange but this person has only one source income which is his job so he can only put limited amount of money into his investments. Do you think doing it this way would be slow? It would take at least 10 years probably?

I can't answer your questions, but I think if you read SteveO's success story many of them will be answered.
 

venom

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Aug 6, 2007
67
7
I look at two things
is the rent 125% of the mortgage ?
Whats the cashflow as a % of the mortgage.
The Burley people call it the safety factor.
So mortgage / cashflow = safety factor
So if the mortgage is 500 and the cashflow is 100
You would need 5 houses to cashflow to pay the mortgage.

Didnt we already have the discussion that cashflow is not fastlane ?
You have to look at making money by
a- having a discount.
b- being able to increase value.
 

tchandy

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
20%
Aug 16, 2007
456
92
Kansas, for now
Cashflow is great. But sometimes if you have a property that still does not cash flow you will still get a return based on depreciation especially if you are waiting for the property to appreciate in value or as a write off on your taxes. Antoher option would be if you believe the property is in a good and upcoming area and you believe the rents will increase over time.

Tom
 

Adam

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
21%
Aug 12, 2007
66
14
Minneapolis
To answer your question about the SFR and condo; when we used to finance a property at 100%, we looked for $250 in monthly cash flow PLUS some other value position. Cash-out on the front, significant equity, etc.

When putting cash into a deal, we figure out what we need for a cash return (if we are looking for a cash return.)

My latest deal, a strip mall, we are buying at a significant discount and this goal is to pay off in as little time as possible. We are financing it with a 240 month note and we are stashing the additional cash-flow in a money market account so that we can use it to pay down the additional principal balance when the call option arrives.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

Corrado79

New Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
5%
Sep 24, 2007
82
4
Santa Monica, CA
I think it's okay to focus on CF, as long as everything else makes sense. If the rents are reliable and the property is in a growing area, a CF focus should be okay as the appreciation should eventually accrue. Again, in such a situation, you should look to put as little of your own money into the deal as possible. For my investment strategy, a property that reliably CF's with very little down and very little involvement by me is fantastic. I let the appreciation take care of itself.
 

hakrjak

Bronze Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
7%
Sep 15, 2007
1,887
127
Colorado Springs
I guess some start out with a SFR or a fourplex, and when they have some equity in the property, they upgrade and 1031 exchange into a better property. They often keep repeating this process untill they can get into a big apartment building with more than 200 units which would ultimately be able to create the passive income that is needed for them to retire. So if monthly cash flow isn't key in the long run, then what is?

A lot of your money in the SFR business is on the back end when you go to sell down the road, and each year when you get that huge tax refund.

I tell a lot of new investors, whether you figure on $100 a month cashflow or $175 or whatever -- it's always negative your first couple years anyway. There's always unforseen repairs to be made, ridiculous demands by tenants, dirtbag tenants who destroy your property beyond belief and skip town, the list goes on.... If you make positive cashflow after all of these "X" factors, then you have succeeded beyond some pretty long odds... but the place where you're almost guarenteed to make bucks is on your tax return each year (I haven't paid federal taxes since I bought my 3rd rental... and I have a near six figure day job), and when you go to sell after either appreciation has occured, or you've built equity by having your renters pay down that note.

Cheers,

- Hakrjak
 

rcardin

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Oct 30, 2007
501
48
Arlington, TX
My property cash flows about 28.00 a month but it is on a 15 year note. I am down to about 10 years left so it is building equity fast. Cash flow is a nice concept but it would take alot of units for it to really show up. I would say if you can consistently flow 100.00 per property you are doing well in my area. The cookie cuter 3/2/2 brick home rents from 800-1200 depending on the neighborhood. It is difficult to cashflow but I am looking more towards retirement. I need 15 more years as a teacher to retire with a measly pension. This 1 house should put my daughter through college and help us live more comfortably during retirement.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

andviv

Gold Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
40%
Jul 27, 2007
5,361
2,143
Washington DC
rcardin, just an observation.... you have clearly defined that this property that breaks even (OK, cashflows $28 a month) is the "College Plan". Wonderful (actually, that was my plan as well, before I modified it to be a little bit more hmmm fastlane).

And that is the reason for my observation.... you are targeting retirement in 15 years so when you turn 46 yrs old you will get your 'measly pension', as you said. But what about you and your real life? I am sure I am not seeing the big picture here, but your comments here seem a little bit 'slowlane mentality'. Do you have other plan that goes a little bit faster? Is there a big goal you are pursuing and if so, what are you doing to reach it?

My main point is, you are capable of finding properties that cashflow (you are already doing it) so why not use that talent to make it big time money cash flowing every month?

PS: I don't want to sound too 'judgmental', it is that your comments made me remember the way I was thinking four years ago, before I realized I could get more from life and enjoy it now, instead of having to wait until 'retirement age' to meet my financial goals.
 

rcardin

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Oct 30, 2007
501
48
Arlington, TX
Andviv,
Actually I would be 56 but doesn't really matter in your questioning.

Since finding this forum and reading everything I can get my hands on we have:

refinanced all credit card debt into a 5 year loan and destroyed the cards
Freed up about 500 a month by consolidating
Re-focused on my DJ business( I kinda got bored with it for the last year )
Spent the last 2 weeks trying to learn about domain parking and generating income that way
Signed up with Realtor for MLS listings in email everyday of target properties.

I guess we are just really developing our plan. Our rental was an accidental investment. We lived there for 4 years and the note was too good to sell it outright when we moved.
Since then we have looked at getting more properties but our credit card debt got out of control. Partly because of over spending and partly because our old house was in the middle of a rehab when we got the deal on our new house. We had less than a month to move and finish the old house. Financially we were screwed and it took about 2 years to adjust form the expense of a 1400 sq ft house to a 2400. Looked great on paper until we got the first $550 electric bill.

Now that we are finally under control we have tried to set some goals. 10 houses in the next 5 years is our major goal but I can't finance them without the down payment. I know creative financing exists but is getting harder to do thanks to sub prime lending. Guess I need to get off my a$$ and get some signs made for finding subject to properties.

I am all about enjoying life now rather than later. Could be why I continue teaching. I only work 187 days a year.
 

andviv

Gold Contributor
Read Fastlane!
Summit Attendee
Speedway Pass
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
40%
Jul 27, 2007
5,361
2,143
Washington DC
I'm ashamed.... I can't make a simple addition (go figure, I am now pulling Enron-style math, 41+15 = 46? :D)

Congratulations in your accomplishments and in starting working on your plan.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

rcardin

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
10%
Oct 30, 2007
501
48
Arlington, TX
Andviv
I teach kids all day that can't do that math and they are our future. :bgh: Boy do we have alot to look forward to in our retirement age.

Thanks for the congrats. I feel like I am finally in control of our future. Fastlane thinking is something we are relatively new to.
 

Post New Topic

Please SEARCH before posting.
Please select the BEST category.

Post new topic

Guest post submissions offered HERE.

New Topics

Fastlane Insiders

View the forum AD FREE.
Private, unindexed content
Detailed process/execution threads
Ideas needing execution, more!

Join Fastlane Insiders.

Top