Skip to content
×
Pro Members Get
Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
ANNUAL Save 16%
$32.50 /mo
$390 billed annualy
MONTHLY
$39 /mo
billed monthly
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
×
Try Pro Features for Free
Start your 7 day free trial. Pick markets, find deals, analyze and manage properties.
All Forum Categories
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

All Forum Posts by: Cody Clinton

Cody Clinton has started 2 posts and replied 21 times.

Post: How Do I Get Rehab Experience Without Spending Money

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14

@Terel Soares The consensus on this I think will be make yourself available and provide value to a local contractor working on a job. My father was a GC for 40 years so I used to work on sites with him as a teenager. He told me he did it so I would always have a trade skill to fall back on and so I wouldn't want to do manual labor the rest of my life (that lesson landed big time.) He said with my experience even at 18 I could walk on any job site and ask to be an apprentice and I would be ok. It might not be that easy if you have zero experience but if you find a way to fill a need for somebody I believe they will be willing to show you the ropes. Hope this helps and best of luck!

Post: Naples Florida Rental in Royal Arms Villas

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14

@Marc Scoleri How does this cash flow?

Post: My girlfriend just closed....Good deal? or not?

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14

@Warren Price Going to need a lot more details than that for anybody here to be able to tell you if it's a good deal or not. 

Post: Income while working deals?

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14

@Brandon Becsi I don't think the goal here should be "How do I split my time effectively?" because by pulling yourself in two different directions both will suffer. My suggestion is since your construction business is fueling your real estate business at the moment would be to focus on that. If you make more money there it will provide you more resources for the real estate end. You also may want to set some system/automation goals within the construction company. If you work hard enough and get in running like a well oiled machine with the right people in place you then may be able to focus solely on the real estate end and step away from the construction while still having it be a revenue stream. I work a full time job as well and I've gotten to the point where I'm so efficient at it that it allows me to maintain my expected performance level and still focus a lot of my effort on building my REI portfolio. It's just my humble two cents but I hope it helps!

Post: Looking at / Portfolio Loan Option

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14

@Mike Stahlman Following this, very interested in portfolio loans as well.

Post: Are SFHs worth keeping more than a few years

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14
Originally posted by @Wade G.:

I have tried to figure this out but I get lost in the details.  I have a couple of houses that I have had for over 10 years and a couple for only a few.  I'm trying to figure out if its worth keeping them that long or if its better to sell them a after a couple of years of holding them as rentals and redeploying the capital.  A few details for this scenario:

- houses are bought with equity gains in the beginning

- all repairs (new AC, roof, paint, flooring, etc.,) is replaced at acquisition so house is in great condition

- no intent of ever paying off the house

- appreciation being normal at 3% for this scenario

- cashflow being $400 month, figuring $200 of the $400 for future repairs and vacancy

- sell and pay capital gains tax rather than 1031

So in my scenario I figure most everything has a 10 year life span...AC, faucets, dishwasher, water heater, will need all fresh paint inside and out, etc.  Basically in 10 years the house has to be rehabbed again and 10k -15k spent.  

Selling in a couple of years the house should still be in good condition, should get to keep more of the net cashflow since you only have one set of tenants and avoiding the future big expenses, and you get to redeploy the capital and capture more equity but pay more closing costs and probably some repair costs on new property.

Waiting 10 years you get more appreciation, more mortgage paydown, but more cashflow has to be saved for rehab.  Could probably refi the house and use that money for rehab to buy another property and capture some equity.

I realize there are many variables to this and I hope it makes sense.  I cant keep my thoughts straight when trying to figure it out.  Maybe its a wash when everything is considered.  In my thinking with normal appreciation, good tenants that dont destroy, it may be better to sell the properties after a couple of years and use that money to by another property but only if there is a huge equity gain.  If not buying for huge equity gains maybe just holding the property 10 plus years is the way to go.

 @Wade G. 

You stated you have zero intent to ever pay the properties off so that seems to me the goal was always to sell and re-purpose the equity. If that's the end game then why all of a sudden the hesitation? Just curious.

Post: Investing in Oklahoma City, OK

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14
Originally posted by @Will Fraser:

@Jay London Hey everyone! I am a full-scale real estate agent in Oklahoma City and I own and operate rental properties and rehab properties. There’s anyway I can leverage my knowledge or skills or you, I would treasure that opportunity!

 @Will Fraser I just started actively looking for investment properties in OKC. Ready to make some offers so PM me and let's see if it's a good fit!

Post: Investing in Oklahoma City, OK

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14
Originally posted by @Laila Farally:

Hi Cody,

We have some family members moving down there and since we'll be visiting them often, we thought of looking at real estate down there. Also, A couple of people mentioned buy and holds there are solid and since the houses are cheaper than Philadelphia prices, it's a way to diversify our portfolio. How about you? 

@Laila Ea love the midwest as a whole for price/rent ratio and was between Oklahoma City and Kansas City but have decided to move forward in OKC. I'm in South Florida where the market has skyrocketed so out of state investing is the way to go for me!

Post: Investing in Oklahoma City, OK

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14
Originally posted by @Jay London:

@Laila Ea I'm in OKC and can probably help you with a hook up for a investor friendly realtor if you haven't already found one. Let me know. I'd be glad to help.

@Jay London Definitely interested in an investor friendly realtor. Have my capital and ready to start making offers! PM me when you get a moment, thanks again.

Post: Investing in Oklahoma City, OK

Cody ClintonPosted
  • Rental Property Investor
  • South Florida
  • Posts 24
  • Votes 14

I'm looking at Oklahoma City as a potential landing spot for my investments as well. What made you decide on OKC?