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All Forum Posts by: Kelsea Barada

Kelsea Barada has started 2 posts and replied 5 times.

Post: New to BP, new to REI!

Kelsea BaradaPosted
  • Jacksonville, AR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 4

Thanks @Paul Thompson, unfortunately I couldn't make it last night but I look forward to making it to the meeting next month! And thank you @Account Closed, we are looking forward to exploring this beautiful state! 

Post: New to BP, new to REI!

Kelsea BaradaPosted
  • Jacksonville, AR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 4

Thank you all for your replies and advice!  @Mark Nolan & @Linval T.  I've started on the podcasts and am reading all of the blogs and education tools I can find. I haven't begun any books yet but plan on buying a couple of them and getting started tonight.  Also, I'm looking forward to beginning networking. Thanks so much @Douglas Skipworth for introducing me to some fellow Arkansans!

Post: New to BP, new to REI!

Kelsea BaradaPosted
  • Jacksonville, AR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 4

Hello! I'm a stay at home Mom in Little Rock, Arkansas looking to get into REI. I found BP on accident and the blogs and podcasts have really opened my eyes to the possibilities. Barring a major change my husband will be in the military until retirement (in ~10 years), and our goal is to have the experience, financial stability and passive income to utilize real estate as our main means of growing wealth from that time. In reading this and other blogs I've found that I am most interested in SFR, house flipping, and small multi unit homes. I'm particularly interested in hybrid house flipping, as well as the potential gains to be made living in a duplex (or small multi family) and "living for free". I'd love to get involved in an REI club here locally and look forward to interacting with y'all!

Post: New to REI, looking at 4 unit townhome row?

Kelsea BaradaPosted
  • Jacksonville, AR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 4

Samantha, thanks so much for your reply! We can qualify for the loan without any income from the rental, and we are talking to some friends who have used the VA loan and looking for lenders with that experience.

I've been looking at the numbers and I don't think it passes the 1% rule with the current asking price. I don't want to sound like I'm on here asking for free advice without doing my own work, I am researching and reading and growing my knowledge as quickly as I can. That being said, I'm struggling to understand how to decide how much a house (in the instance 4 plex) is worth.  Is it best to simply stick to the 1% rule and only offer as much as would come out to that? Or does the rule change as we will be living there also?

Post: New to REI, looking at 4 unit townhome row?

Kelsea BaradaPosted
  • Jacksonville, AR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 4

My husband and I are brand new to real estate investing! We are currently renting and are content with that, but will soon have a one time influx of cash that we are interested in using to get into RE. I've found a 4 unit row of townhouses for $500,000.  They have been on the market for 141 days already, and we won't be ready to buy for another couple months so if they're still for sale then I'd assume we can get the price down.  They're in a less nice part of town but are on the outskirts of 2 areas going through urban renewal. They're walking distance to: a new (successful) brewery, a great new street filled with restaurants and bars, a minor league baseball stadium, and a new 60 mile river bike trail. They're also a 5 minute trolly ride from the main downtown area.  If we bought these we would live in one and try and rent out the other 3. Let me say that we will obviously have an inspector come and look through these, as well as my grandfather (who is in roofing) and my father in law (who is a mechanical engineer that loves wiring houses).    

For the money: we would intend to put down about 15%, and use about $30,000 to update and refresh the units. I've been looking but can't tell if we can use the VA loan for this (with about a 2.5% interest rate) since it isn't a single family home. I don't think that we can, so (from the online calculators) it looks like we can get about 3.6-4.4% interest rate. Am I looking at this correctly? And is $500,000 a completely unreasonable amount to begin with?

And HERE is my MAIN question:

We haven't seen any of the pro forma or actual return numbers on the unit yet, and I'm wondering if they will really (or should really) have an impact on our decision.  Let me explain that in more detail: our idea for these units is not to keep long-term renters.  These units are near a military base (where my husband works) that sees a constant flow of airmen staying 4-9 months at a time.  Their housing allowance ranges from $31/day to $91/day (depending on base vacancies).  We would like to advertise only to them and create relationships with their squadrons that allows us to be full year round with the airmen coming through for various training reasons.  These townhouse units are closer to base than any other apartments in the city, but still walking distance to a lot of the night life and restaurants.  Is our reasoning legitimate or are we using our imagination to create a fairy tale?  We feel that this is an up and coming area, whose property prices will go up as gentrification continues, but is that and our tenant "plan" enough (and thought out enough) to convince us to make a move? Any advice is greatly appreciated, even if it's just that we are fooling ourselves!!