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All Forum Posts by: Chad Clanton

Chad Clanton has started 42 posts and replied 594 times.

Post: The New Guy from Central Virginia

Chad ClantonPosted
  • Contractor
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 647
  • Votes 204

Thanks everyone for the great welcome! I'm reading the beginner's guide on the site right now, about halfway through. I love the layout and style, it makes it ridiculously easy to visualize the concepts within.

Thom H.
It's good to be here, thanks for the input. It seems like there are a LOT of NoVa folks on here, but not so many in Central Va. A bit of a shame, because it seems like there's quite a bit of activity down here. I've thought about doing multifamilies later, after I learn the ropes, for cashflow purposes, but essentially right now I'm going to learn as much as possible and progress into flips to build up a bit more investment money. It seems to me like many of the niches are interconnected, and have a feeling that I'll eventually explore quite a few of them. Time will tell!

Karen Margrave
Hi Karen, thanks for the food for thought. We also own some "meh" land down the road which we got for next to nothing in a nice, rural area. If all the prereqs are there i.e. a decent perk, soil, etc, we're thinking about building another house on it ourselves. My father and I built our house ourselves when I was 13 with the exception of the technical trades (plumbing, electrical, etc), and we're rather thinking about doing it again. If that all works out as expected, we should be able to save close to $1K/month in mortgage cost difference, food savings (there's room for a nice big garden :-), and assorted other related expenses. We're the classic "sometimes the money really ISN'T worth the time" couple, so we're trying to turn what we do make right now into something more productive and satisfying.

Your points about the local market are well taken. I don't currently have access to the MLS so I pretty well stick with news articles, zillow and similar sites, tax assessment sites, etc to learn what I can. I do a lot of comparable buy/sold searches on zillow :-P If you have any tips on learning/verifying the market, please feel free to share if you happen to have time, and thanks for your input!

Alex Harris

Hi Alex, thanks for the welcome! I may end up working wholesale a bit on the side as I think I can see how it could potentially relate to flips on an ad hoc basis; are you located in Virginia, and if so, roughly what areas are you looking into (NoVa, Central, SE?). Last of all, take care and good luck!

Post: Real property data search

Chad ClantonPosted
  • Contractor
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 647
  • Votes 204

Hi Nicole, I'm pretty new to all this as well, but zillow.com, trulia.com, homes.com, and realtor.com are decent sites, as are generally the county/city tax assessor sites or other real property taxing authority sites (though sometimes you've got to do some digging). Also some jurisdictions have good GIS (Geographic Information Systems) which may have varying amounts of data, from none to tons; that said, the GIS is a good verification tool, often to include owner info, as do the tax sites. Hope some of this helps!

Post: Hi from Virginia

Chad ClantonPosted
  • Contractor
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 647
  • Votes 204

Hi Marybeth, I'm in Central Virginia between Richmond and Charlottesville, trying to learn my way into this business too. We've had two NoVa families move in down here in about a 1/2 mi area in the past couple weeks, and the lake is always attractive, so trying to do some local looking. If you ever look in this area let me know.

Post: The New Guy from Central Virginia

Chad ClantonPosted
  • Contractor
  • San Antonio, TX
  • Posts 647
  • Votes 204

Good morning everyone, my name is Chad Clanton. I'm 30 years old, married with a 6 month old and not quite 3 year old, and am just starting in real estate. I am a US Army vet currently working in the security field, both of which have left me with a lively case of chronic insomnia and next to no time. I've been reading everything I can for the past six months on real estate, from tax sales to wholesaling strategies, and generally learning in my free time. I enjoy studying, and even more applying, processes, particularly when I can see a result from my efforts. After almost eight years in security, I finally glanced into the generalities of real estate, and realized that I was frankly intrigued. So, here I am.

That said, I initially got suckered for a significant sum of money for a tax/ real estate program, and have learned more from ten articles on BP than I ever did with the program. Wish I'd known about BP then, but possibly a good lesson to learn right out of the gate. In any event, given what research I've done thus far, I would like to explore fix and flip properties in the short term, expanding into buy and hold/ rentals over time. I am considering getting my real estate license in order to better understand the processes involved, as well. That said, though mine and my wife's work eats a huge amount of our time and will no doubt somewhat depress our learning curve, it does provide us funds to embark on this venture, just proving the good comes right along with the not quite so good.

As a bit of background, an amusing (somewhat) anecdote: our current house, our first, may become our first flip. Around this time last year, we purchased a largish 4 bed, 3 bath home, built in 2007, on short sale in a higher end rural commuter subdivision. The previous owner didn't insulate the finished attic/3rd floor, and there was only one outlet i.e, unpermitted work. Nice laminated hardwood floors, but no insulation. Ok, we knew about it, no issue. Then we realized we have to reroute drainage from all the downspouts, because the house is at the bottom of a hill and graded toward, not away, from the house. Ok, easy work. Then, the well pump goes out because they used a $5 plastic connector rather than a $10 brass one. Had another installed. So, needless to say the love story with the house has gone by this point, and we figure we'll turn the finished attic into an in-law type suite with bed, bath, and small sitting room and take care of any issues we find, then put it up for sale. One comp in the neighborhood over the past few months was a foreclosure with one less bedroom and water damage in the basement that went for the same price we paid, while another somewhat smaller comp, also a foreclosure, went for about $35k less, and a similar, though brick faced and with one less bedroom, went for $45k more. Best of all, the developer has been doing all the advertising for the rest of the subdivision , and there have been at least five families scoping out the subdivision recently. So, we'll see :-)

In any event, I apologize if this was a (very) long winded intro; I'll try to keep things a bit more concise in the future. Also, I apologize for any typos, as I constantly end up typing on my Ipad or phone. Thanks for all of your time, and I look forward to hearing from all of you. Take care, and good luck.