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All Forum Posts by: Marc Rice

Marc Rice has started 3 posts and replied 1809 times.

Post: Real Estate Agents Can Now Get Paid on Mortgages

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837

I've heard of this with hard money lenders who are not "lenders" technically. Sounds interesting!

Post: STR market in Columbus, OH & Kansas City, MO.

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837
Quote from @Mostafa Faghih:

I'm looking for top properties in the short-term rental market in Columbus, OH and Kansas City, MO.

I want to know more about the current state of the market, top-performing neighborhoods, and high-quality properties for short-term rentals. If you have experience investing in short-term rental properties in these cities, please share your insights, strategies, and tips for success.

Thank you!


 Columbus is a great market for STRs and MTRs. I specialize in 1bds and studios here.

Post: What will the growth in Columbus in the next years do for Real Estate in the City?

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837
Quote from @Kent Petersen:

Columbus is adding multiple developments in the next couple of years.

First, Intel being built is bringing 7,000 construction jobs, as well as 3,000 permanent jobs to the city!

Secondly, Nationwide Childrens Childrens hospital is adding on a new orthopedics and surgery center, new research facilities, and a new 12 story inpatient hospital tower. 

Lastly, there have been talks about a professional volleyball team that will be calling Columbus their home town. This looks like they will be hitting the city in 2024. 

Lots to be excited about for the city of Columbus!


 Columbus is rapidly growing! Midterm rentals will be a good opportunity as the transient traffic rises.

Post: Looking to sell SFH in Columbus, OH. Proven STR/MTR

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837

I specialize in short term rentals and MTR's in Columbus. Happy to assist!

Post: Recommendations in Columbus OH for multifamily 40 unit

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837
Quote from @Olya Shumilova:

Can anyone recommend in Columbus OH: 1)Property manager (experienced with 35 units and up), 2)Lender for 40 units aprt building, 3)Insurance Company? 


 Happy to send over some good ones - I'd recommend different ones for A/B vs B-, C to C-

Post: Starting out need a little help

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837
Quote from @Daniel Villa lopez:

Hi I’m starting out in tax overages/liens and I did research on everything, the last thing I need is help with getting the documents I would need could anyone help me out where I could find these 


 I would partner up with a title company who can assist in your questions and marketing.

Post: Things I learned in the first 7 months of owning a rental property:

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837
Quote from @Nathan Holt:

On September 27th of 2022 I bought my first rental property. Here are four things I have learned since then:

1. No matter how much information you read, listen to, or talk about with other investors, you will not understand the reality of the system until you have fully immersed yourself into your own property and gained your own personal experience.

Before buying my property I had been listening to, watching, and reading anything and everything I could get my hands on regarding any kind of investing, business building, self development, and real estate. I started at absolute zero in 2020 when I first decided to make an effort to better my life. I knew nothing about real estate, so I started educating myself as much as I could for the next two years until I felt comfortable and contacted a real estate agent.

I quickly saw for myself how much different gathering the information is from implementing it in your life. I had heard on podcasts and in books and videos about this, but there truly is no substitute for the real life experience.

2. Going over your budget and seeing that you can make it work is a lot different than living out the budget and pushing through the project.

I looked at my spending and saw that I could make the numbers work for me to invest in a property. I figured I had already been living on a budget, so why would it be much different to switch up where I am putting some things in order to invest in myself and get a better life for my family?

It is a lot different. There were plenty of expenses that I did not, or could not have foreseen. I knew this was going to happen from all of the content I had consumed, but I had no idea how many there were going to be, or how important they would be to fix immediately.

For a little more context, the house I bought was built in 1910, and within these first six months we have had flooring issues (the kitchen floor almost became the basement floor), pest issues, furnace problems, electrical issues, contractor problems, shingles blown off the roof, and more.

If I had to start all over again, I would look to have a larger cash fund to begin the project with. The process would be a lot smoother and less stressful.

3. Knowing how to renovate is just as important as knowing your numbers (if renovating falls under your strategy and you don't have the funds for "who not how")

When I first decided that the best investments for me were LTRs (long term rentals), I was terrified of all the laws and paperwork I would have to learn how to use and work with. I had done nothing close to this before in my life and the thought of messing up and getting sued by a tenant or fined by the government terrified me (it still is scary).

What I neglected to study was how to take on DIY projects. I had virtually no experience with renovating besides changing a few door handles and some painting. I had heard of the “who not how” strategy, but I quickly learned that “who not how” is very expensive and quite difficult to utilize when you only make 15$ an hour.

I should have been studying how to do various projects while also learning all of the paper, legal, and business sides of things as well. I am lucky to have support from local investors, Biggerpockets, and from family, but it was definitely a mistake to not teach myself these skills before jumping in.

And always remember: never be afraid to ask for help.

4. It’s not as scary as you think it will be.

I was terrified when I first bought this property. I have never been a super confident person willing to expose myself to potential risk. I had always stayed in my comfort zone and rode along through life there. But as the famous quote goes “The problem with the comfort zone is that nothing grows there.”

I needed to force myself to step forward if I ever wanted to go anywhere in life. It was terrifying taking those first few steps. Buying the property, telling the tenant I was raising his rent, signing a new lease with the tenant, these were all valid things I had to deal with, but in the end they were not as scary as I thought they would be. As time goes on and I gain more confidence and familiarity with the work, the more I can see how things should only go up from here.

What do you think? Do you agree or disagree? Are these good lessons and do you have any more to share? Let me know!

P.S. I am in Newark Ohio. If you are also investing there or nearby lets get in touch!


 Newark is a great growing market!

Post: How Much Do Cash Offers Matter? Just Closed A Cash Flowing 4/2 BRRRR For A Client!

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837
Quote from @Jimmy Lieu:

So I'm a local investor and agent here in Columbus Ohio and earlier this week, I helped an awesome client close a 4 bedroom/2 bathroom single family house for $125k cash. It needs a bit of cosmetic updating - likely $15-20k. However, it should be able to cash flow $1600-1700+ per month. I think this personally was an amazing cash flowing deal which my client will be able to net a few hundred dollars per month and then get most of his cash out from the BRRRR. So happy for his success!

However, I'm very certain I was able to land this deal for my client most likely because he was a cash buyer, but if he was using conventional financing, we likely wouldn't have gotten this deal. Here in Columbus Ohio, it is a pretty competitive real estate market where any "good" deal turns into a highest and best situation with multiple cash offers.

Question for investors who buy deals using conventional financing - how much success have you been seeing and how do you structure your deal to have the most success possible? Thoughts on this?


 You can have a stronger conventional offer than a financed offer if you structure diligence requests properly I've found.

Post: Super motivated and looking to build a new career

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837

Finding a good mentor and environment to learn in is very helpful. Becoming an agent was what helped me a lot. But I know plenty of successful flippers and wholesalers too.

Post: 1 acre lot w/ house vs typical tract house for rental property

Marc Rice
Posted
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
  • Posts 1,877
  • Votes 1,837

More land shouldn't really hurt from a renting standpoint, unless you're making your tenants cut it per their lease at which point some may not want to do that. But you also would attract some long term renters who are willing to cut the grass if so.

The strategy your proposing sounds solid to me. Just be cautious of private well/septic which could lead to large unforeseen expenses.