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All Forum Posts by: Grant P.

Grant P. has started 4 posts and replied 25 times.

Post: My first property and house hack, Northern Virginia

Grant P.Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Fairfax, VA
  • Posts 25
  • Votes 17
Quote from @Adrienne Green:

You rock, Grant!  Your willingness to house and rent out the extra rooms really set you up for future success!


 Thanks for the kind words, Adrienne! It's all thanks to your guidance when I was getting started. I'm gearing up for house hack #3 sometime this year and I'm taking classes to become an agent myself in the meantime. 

Post: My first property and house hack, Northern Virginia

Grant P.Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Fairfax, VA
  • Posts 25
  • Votes 17

Investment Info:

Townhouse buy & hold investment.

Purchase price: $305,000
Cash invested: $20,000

This was my very first property I bought after graduating college and within my first year working in DC. I treated it as a house hack and went as far as living on the couch and renting out every room. While the master was supposed to be a short-term living solution that I'd live in once the resident moved out, I wasn't complaining as I had healthy cash flow while I was living there. Now I rent the unit out to my father at a net 0 cash flow.

What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?

I had first heard about house hacking through bigger pockets and reading about the strategy in Craig Curelop's book on my commutes to work. I was interested in taking this step forward because while I was grateful, my father subsidized a lot of my living expenses in exchange for maintaining his place while he was frequently on travel. So I knew that real estate was the right step forward for me and house hacking seemed like the perfect way to start.

How did you find this deal and how did you negotiate it?

I found this deal through my wonderful realtor, Adrienne Green, and she did a great job advising me on what would be a reasonable offer and what to request as a buyer. This property was on the market for about a month and we were able to negotiate it down to 10k under asking, which I can't believe looking back considering how neighboring townhomes can't stay on the market for longer than a week and go for over asking.

How did you finance this deal?

I went with conventional finance while taking advantage of a first-time homebuyer program that my lender, Will Hollister (recommended to me by Adrienne), found for me. I saved up my downpayment while working a side hustle on weekends to speed up the process.

How did you add value to the deal?

I furnished all common areas of the home to prepare for my future residents, who turned out to be brothers of my fraternity that graduated before me. Nothing else major was added and altered except for some aesthetic changes.

What was the outcome?

At the moment, the place now houses my father. This transition took place as I was preparing to buy my next house hack 18 months after I originally closed. Previously, our two-bedroom, two-bathroom condo was leased to him at essentially the same cost I'm passing to him. My father was a great tenant and his landlord reciprocated by rarely raising rent and not pushing the issue that I was living there without my name on the lease.

Lessons learned? Challenges?

My ceiling flooded twice! First due to me not trusting my gut and using the washing machine after it mysteriously filled itself with water overnight, and the second time a year later due to a polybutylene pipe bursting, which would have been an easy fix had I known that this was something to look out for a while the ceiling from the first water incident was open. While these hardships weren't ideal, I gained some important life experience and intuition.

Did you work with any real estate professionals (agents, lenders, etc.) that you'd recommend to others?

Realtor: Adrienne Green
Lender: Will Hollister

Post: Baby steps towards a house hack

Grant P.Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Fairfax, VA
  • Posts 25
  • Votes 17

@Adrienne Green

Thank you very much for the detailed response! I appreciate the time taken to write out the information. The 1 bedroom option does sound appealing as well and is something I hadn't considered at all.

Post: Baby steps towards a house hack

Grant P.Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Fairfax, VA
  • Posts 25
  • Votes 17

@Theresa Harris

Ideally I'd like to find a du/tri/multiplex but I'm either not searching on the right platforms or can't find any! Looks like single family home/townhome/condo is the route I need to take which I'm fine with.

Post: Baby steps towards a house hack

Grant P.Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Fairfax, VA
  • Posts 25
  • Votes 17

Hello, I'm a new hopeful investor and a recent college graduate. I'm looking to start a house hack in Northern Virginia and commute in to DC, right now I take the train so I can be very flexible with where I live thanks to busing, trains, and the metro.

I'm in the process of saving for a down payment and as of right now I have cash reserves to cover a $250,000 3.5% down payment. From the communities I'm looking at the homes are selling in thr $300k range and just in to $400k. I'm looking for guidance, advice, and additional resources on the next steps to starting my first house hack. I'm working my way through Curelop's book, which is how I found this community. The biggest concern on my mind is the process of finding tenants. I understand that this is far down the line of something I'll need to take care of, but a big fear of mine is drowning in a mortgage while failing to find tenants.

A few general questions I have are:

1. Let's say I reach my goal down payment, now what?

2. What can I be doing besides browsing redfin as I save up for a down payment?

A local related question I have is:

1. I understand that Virginia has laws against unrelated tenants leasing under the same roof. Does this mean that my house hack is capped at 4 bedrooms (for four unrelated tenants)?

Thanks for taking the time to read this.

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