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All Forum Posts by: Dan H.

Dan H. has started 31 posts and replied 6426 times.

Post: 2 YR requirement to add RENT for DEBT/INCOME ratio

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

I would move to Groton into a month to month rental.  You can look for a good investment property and if you find one that the numbers work as a long term buy n hold including management fees then purchase it and do your house hack until time to depart (6 to 12 months).  If you do not find it then you are only renting 6-12 months.

It would be a fairly rare case were it would be worth buying and then selling in as short term as 6 to 12 months.  There is the cost of loans (possible points, inspections, mortgage broker fee, etc), the cost of selling (mostly realtor fee).  You would likely need ~8% appreciation to break even.  I will leave room for an exception if you find a property were you believe you can get significant force appreciation (convert a 2 BR to 3 BR, make a duplex into a triplex, appreciation for a rehab, etc.).  This would basically be a flip that you would be living in while performing the work to flip.

Good luck

Post: New investor from San Diego CA

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625
Originally posted by @Gabrion Kisler:

@Sean Yang, and Cecil Mason, and James Wachob,

Gentlemen, 

...

Sean, where do you find your guru seminars in San Diego?  I have been wanting to start attending some of these but I don't really know where to start looking, and more importantly how to determine if it's legitimate or a sales pitch.  Maybe that is the gamble.  

...

I am not a big fan of most of those guru seminars.  They do a decent job motivating which helps them sell subsequent seminars.  I think the information that the provide is easily available on the internet.  You could probably ask any question on this site and get someone that knows what they are talking about to answer (but you may have to filter out those that do not know what they are talking about).

There is a monthly Meet up at a current REI project put on by some San Diego BP members (@Justin R., @Parker Cox, @Kevin Fox, @Tim G.).  This is not a seminar but more an open house with a exchange of information.  Especially if you stay to the end of the meet up there is a lot of chance to talk with the investor and get your questions answered with a smaller group than are present earlier in the Meet up when there may be 30 or 40 people there.

The Meetups have ranged from flips of SFH, to flip of a SFR that will be sold as a SFR but the buyer will be renting it as a duplex (included tricks of the trade to work around the SFR zoning), to a quad that is a buy n hold where each unit can use some rehab, to a purchase of empty lot and building 3 new SFRs. In summary they have ranged a lot of the REI scenarios and I learned something at almost all of them even the building of 3 new units which is above my comfort zone (I learned it is ~$100K to break dirt on a new SFR which places a bottom value on any SFR).

There has been no selling. I have found them to be motivating, a chance to network, and learn something.

I recommend you come to at least one. It will be worth the time just for the chance to network with other San Diego RE investors.

I have not seen the posting for the next one yet. I have one of my search words be "San Diego". It usually (but not always) catches the BP Meet up open house post.

Good luck

 

Post: San Diego market

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

Historically it would be difficult to go wrong with financed buy n hold San Diego RE. Be sure you can weather any short term depreciation as the only people to have lost money on San Diego financed buy n hold RE are those that sold the property when it depreciated. 

Good luck

Post: San Diego Investor

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625
Originally posted by @Coleman Doughty:

Hi All,

I work and live in San Diego, CA. A wonderful place to be, but not a great place to invest. I own a rental property in Laguna Hills and a primary residence in San Diego. ..

Thanks already for the great community, I've lurked for over a year and constantly come back for the forum and great tools.

Coleman

As @Matt R. Indicated San Diego is a great place to invest as is Orange County. For financed buy n hold So Cal has better ROI than virtually anywhere else for virtually any duration between 1 year and at least 50 years. Granted the ROI is based on property and rent appreciation and not initial cash flow. I purchase a property 3 years ago that was cash neutral at purchase using my cap expense numbers (most people think are high) that now cash flows $800/month. People think appreciation is not guaranteed but in San Diego in the long term it has always gone up. 1, 3, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 years makes no difference the properties have appreciated (this is not to imply that there are not some short periods of depreciation - long term it appreciates). Note property appreciation and rent appreciation typically go up together. In past 3 years monthly rents have increased almost $100/year.

Add in prop 13 protection. 

There are few better places to invest for financed buy n hold than San Diego. None of those better cash flow locations have anywhere near the ROI of financed buy n hold San Diego REI. It's a verifiable fact. You could leave rent appreciation out of the equation and it would be true. Look up San Diego's RE appreciation and determine what sort of positive cash flow would be necessary to match it if you were putting down 20% or 25% for the properties. In either 2013 or 2014 (I do not remember which year but one of those years San Diego RE appreciated over 20%) you would have had 100% ROI for the year just on property appreciation (not including the rental appreciation).

Good luck with your better cash flowing locations. 

Post: I Want Out, Any Suggestions?

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

I enjoy my real estate pursuits more than my 9 to 5 job and have had enough success in the real estate to quit my 9-5 job yet I have not.  For me it is probably that I like the safety net but I will add the job satisfaction with my job has varied from extremely satisfying to not at all satisfying and currently is someone in the middle (closer to not satisfying).   So I may be holding out hope that my next position is extremely satisfying.

If you never found the job satisfying why not simply switch jobs to something other real estate, something close to your current job?  Real estate investing can be difficult, is best done with some capital and safety nets especially when starting.  So my suggestion is you find a 9-5 job that provides more satisfaction than your current job even pays less.  Then while having the safety net of the 9-5 job pursue your Real estate ambitions.  If you are successful in a few years you can quit the 9-5 job.  If you are not successful at least you have a safety net that does not suck the life out of you.

Good luck

Post: Help with San Diego tax deed sales

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

San Diego RE auctions are very competitive. I have never purchased at one as the price typically seems too high for the risk. Being patient, I can usually find something that is a better value: either a good value MLS or possibly off market property.

I go to a few BP open houses in San Diego and know a few investors. It seems like MLS is the top source of San Diego RE investors whether flip or buy n hold. Just have to be patient for the property with profit potential and act fast when one is available. Also we are approaching what is typically the best time of year for purchasing. In fact we are looking at multiple properties currently when we have had 0 good values in our market niche since spring time.

Good luck

Post: Should I dump my CPA ?

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

My tax man (EA,  Esquire - not a CPA) only discloses his hourly rate which is very high but he is very good (he is the named partner of the firm).  He does not charge for small items like quick answers to questions.  He also typically gives us a break for using quite a few of his hours in one session.  For most items I do not know what the charge will be prior to getting the bill but I always expect the bill to be significant.

example bill may be: 5 hours * (his hourly rate) = $x - $150 discount = $y.

He makes a very good living but he is very good.  Even though his hourly rate is very high (makes the hourly rate my company charges for y time that I think is very high look not so high) I am not looking elsewhere.

In your case you seem to not be happy with the deductions being found, are getting no rate disclosure (at least I know the hourly rate and know it is high), and do not think much of the work being performed.  I think this answers your question.

I do want to point out that sometimes you get what you pay for or not all bargains are bargains.  I highly suspect that my tax man's rate is in the upper 5% but I also think his skill is likely in the upper 5%.  I think he typically saves me than he costs.

Post: Newbie from California

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

A lot of new RE investors either do not know about cap expenses or under calculate cap expenses.

So my suggestion for you is to educate yourself on actual costs to have buy n hold residential REI. There of course is mortgage, interest, insurance, vacancy, maintenance, management expense and/or time, possibly utilities (some of my units I pay utilities and some I do not, possibly gardening (some of my properties I pay for gardening and some I do not), and the easy to miss and fairly large cap expense.

You did not indicate where the properties are located but in San Diego I use $250 to $300/month for cap expense.  Many people think my numbers are high but I suspect the majority of them have spent 0 time actually calculating cap expenses in San Diego and are simply estimating that this high.  The San Diego cap expense will be higher than most other parts of the country because most things cost more in So Cal including labor.

Good luck

Post: Quality Home Inspector for SFH's in Oceanside, California

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625

If you get a good home inspector you would be wasting your money paying for a second home inspection.  However, the good home inspector may recommend you bring in experts to further analyze potential issues identified such as a foundation contractor, roofer, electrician, etc.

I have a good one (not the cheapest) but I am unsure if he goes all the way to Oceanside.  You can PM if you want his name. 

Good luck

Post: Depreciation does not cover rent. (50% land). Help

Dan H.
#2 General Landlording & Rental Properties Contributor
Posted
  • Investor
  • Poway, CA
  • Posts 6,551
  • Votes 7,625
Originally posted by @Brent Coombs:

@Justin R., wouldn't your "cash flow" be answered in this line item:-

  • Total Income: $33,600 / Total Expenses: $31,300 (ie. = $2,300, = $191.66/m)? Cheers...

 I do not include depreciation in my cash flow analysis but I do include an estimate for cap expense.  I agree with Justin that in San Diego typically depreciation is larger than even my conservative (I.e. Large) cap expense estimate.  So I would likely be having this property reflect higher cash flow than the $192/month.  Likely closer to $400/month.  I have purchases from a couple years ago with similar numbers but finding such purchases in San Diego today is getting more challenging.