Skip to content
Two investors reviewing resources on a laptop

Get industry-leading resources — for free

Unlock resources for every investing strategy and stage with a free account.

By continuing, you agree to BiggerPockets LLC's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

×
Take Your Forum Experience
to the Next Level
Create a free account and join over 3 million investors sharing
their journeys and helping each other succeed.
Use your real name
By signing up, you indicate that you agree to the BiggerPockets Terms & Conditions.
Already a member?  Login here
Followed Discussions Followed Categories Followed People Followed Locations
Private Lending & Conventional Mortgage Advice
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

Updated over 15 years ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

5
Posts
0
Votes
John Hanson
  • Real Estate Investor
0
Votes |
5
Posts

How to Finance

John Hanson
  • Real Estate Investor
Posted

Early next year, I'd like to by a condo, probably in the $140,000 range. I will move in and possibly do a light renovation. I may stay there indefinitely, or I may move out at some point and make it a rental. Condo might be REO or a short sale.

This is my financial situation (what I could apply toward the house):
-$10,000 Cash
-$40,000 401(k)
-$40,000 IRA

My circumstances:
-Finishing a Master's program.
-Have job offer in hand (about $50,000 salary)
-Haven't owned a house for 3.5 years
-Currently Renting month-by-month

I have no idea how to proceed. My ideal situation would be to to get a place under contract and move in now, then secure conventional financing when I start working in January. Perhaps a lease option would work, but might it work in an REO or short-sale situation. (I don't know a lot about lease options, REO, or short sales... only what I've read over the last few months)

How would you proceed? (Thanks for any thoughts you can offer)

Most Popular Reply

User Stats

21,918
Posts
12,885
Votes
Bill Gulley#3 Guru, Book, & Course Reviews Contributor
  • Investor, Entrepreneur, Educator
  • Springfield, MO
12,885
Votes |
21,918
Posts
Bill Gulley#3 Guru, Book, & Course Reviews Contributor
  • Investor, Entrepreneur, Educator
  • Springfield, MO
Replied

Unless you're condo is in a senior living development, I'd suggest a single family home, something that won't fee you to death, something you could use as you liked, something that would appreciate in time, something that would be marketable...that people could finance easily.

When I saw "condo" that's all it took for me. You can find more opinions here as well. Good luck....

Loading replies...