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All Forum Posts by: Josh Young

Josh Young has started 20 posts and replied 353 times.

Post: 1st Syndication- first hand advice needed

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Doug Henderson I have not invested in a syndication yet, but when I do I plan to start with Open Door Capital https://odcfund.com/ This is Brandon Turner's fund, if you don't know him he was a host of the BP podcast for years.

Post: Old Town Scottsdale - worth it to renovate and use Heloc for downpayment of 2nd home?

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Chris DeSoto great breakdown! Buying a new primary residence to move into and turning your current house into a rental is the easiest way to build your portfolio, low down payments and the best available interest rates.  

I would not renovate the current house before you turn it into a rental if the rehab would cost $100k and would only bring in an extra $300 per month. You have good leverage on it now with about 65% LTV and a super low interest rate, so your principle pay down is strong and you are going to be net cash flow positive even after repairs/maint, cap ex, vacancy, and management. In 7-10 years you can do the rehab right before you decide to sell or cash out refi.

Buy the new primary residence with a conventional loan 5% down payment. Maybe in a few years if rates drop and/or values go up you can do a rate and term refinance to get rid of the PMI and/or lower the rate.

Save your cash and repeat this same thing again in a couple years. Here is a post I made on how I did a very similar thing: https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/61/topics/1096979-how-i...

Post: Zillow Background / Credit Score - DO NOT USE / WARNING!!!

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Marcus Auerbach did everything on the report change or just the top line number?

Post: Reducing rent to place a tenant?

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Michele Velazquez there is no such thing as too low, at some point you will be low enough on the rent to attract a quality applicant. You are better off shooting a little low on pricing at the beginning and raising rent on the renewal or turnover when you have more time to find a tenant so your vacancy isn't affected. Maximizing the rental rate in year one shouldn't be your goal, your goal should be quickly filling the vacancy with a quality applicant, real estate investing is a long game.

Post: Allow Dutch German shepherd dog in rental property?

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Lara Thatcher if you do accept them as a tenant it would be smart to add a clause to your lease requiring them to have and provide proof of renters insurance and make them name you as additional insured on the policy.  This is generally a good practice anyway, but I would highly recommend it if your insurance policy is not going to cover you.

Post: Single family home NOT going for rent

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401
Quote from @Sandy Sandy:

Thanks for your response.

Here is the link https://www.apartments.com/28-barton-st-rochester-ny/lsq5j3f...


I see you just posted it on Zillow too, that's smart, but your PM should be doing that, that's what you pay them for. They should also tell you that based on the comps on Zillow it should rent for $1900 per month, maybe $2000, but I would list at $1900 to make sure you get it filled quickly, every month of vacancy is equal to an 8% reduction in annual revenue. A lot of tenants have small pets too, so I would consider small dogs and cats for an extra $25 per month. Your pics and description look okay, they could be better and you could spell out your terms a little more, but I think price is the biggest factor for why you haven't had any applicants yet.

Post: Single family home NOT going for rent

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Sandy Sandy what is the address? if you post a link to the listing we can give you feedback. But I will say if you are not getting any applications it's usually priced too high, has bad photos, a bad description (terms), or it's not listed in the right places like the MLS or Zillow. Also, bigger more expensive properties take longer to rent in some markets.

Post: Guidance for a newcomer

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401
Quote from @Ryker Valk:

Hi all,

I am 19, currently in university but extremely interested in multi-family investing. To all the seasoned vets out there, what single most crucial piece of advice you would give someone looking to break into the industry? I am highly motivated to achieve financial freedom, I have been self educating for the better part of a year and it seems like Multi family is the most viable avenue for me. I appreciate any answers/advice.


Thank you!

 Talk to a lender and learn the basic rules of qualifying for a loan. Borrowing money is one of the most important parts of real estate investing. This will probably require maximizing your income, minimizing your debts and may require that you start in a single family and then work your way up to multi-family. Here is a post I did on how I became an investor, I hope this helps: https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/61/topics/1096979-how-i...

Post: 3-5% down on a primary residence

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401
Quote from @Griffin Hines:

It's my understanding that I can buy a house for 3-%5 down as a primary residence, "house-hack" it while I live there, and then rent it out fully after I've owned it for one year.

Is it possible to rent it out for short term rentals on airbnb at any point before reaching 15-20% equity?

You nailed it, that's the best way to acquire rental properties, you have to move every time, but well worth it. Here is a link to a post I did on this: https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/61/topics/1096979-how-i...

The amount of equity you have has nothing to do with it, you could rent it out on airbnb as part of your house hacking while it's your primary residence if you wanted too (airbnb part of the home all the time or even airbnb the entire home while you are out of town on vacation), just make sure it is actually your primary residence if you say it is.

Post: Newly empty nester venturing out to see how we like it

Josh Young
Posted
  • Rental Property Investor / REALTOR® / Property Manager
  • Gilbert, AZ
  • Posts 363
  • Votes 401

@Debbie Palmer I assume you are working with an experienced Qualified Intermediary for your 1031 exchange, it's very important that you follow the specific steps and timeline that the IRS has for the exchange.  

I have heard that Payson is not the best place for STR because you don't get many out of state visitors as most people out of state have never heard of Payson, so you get mostly just people from the Phoenix MSA, but I'm sure you can still be successful if you are a great operator with a great property. Looking on the MLS there are several furnished MTR rentals available, but hardly any LTR, so I would think that LTR could be a good opportunity.