All Forum Posts by: Marc Rice
Marc Rice has started 3 posts and replied 1809 times.
Post: Need help with HELOC on rental property....can this be done?

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
Originally posted by @Kerry Baird:
I've gleaned these lenders from the kind people on BP. I have used PenFed and TD Bank for HELOCs on investment property. Post back if you find another lender who serves you well, and I will add them to my list and pay it forward. These were largely sourced pre-CV19, so eat the fish and spit out the bones.
The DTI percentage range varies by lender, and is less than what you will find for an owner occupied property, due to lender risk. While qualifying for a HELOC is dependent on your home equity and your credit score, good or excellent credit makes it easier to qualify. A good average to shoot for is 620 or higher. Plus, the better your credit score, the better your interest rate.
Ridge Lending All in One, first position HELOC
AFCU does 80% LTV on NOO. Utah
Americafirst 80% LTV on noo 65% LTV Utah
Arvest Bank AR, OK, AL, MO
Aven…not on investment properties.
Bank of Souther California
Bank of West (BNP Paribas) 60% LTV CA, AZ
BB&T will loan on a rental portfolio
BBVA, now PNC
Bellwether Community Credit Union, NH and MA 85% to 100%, draw 10 yrs
BMO Harris, 3 HELOCs to 70% LTV
Boeing employee credit union
Cal Coast Credit Union, CA
Citizens Bank -Minnesota, only in-state. Kyle Potswald
Citizens first position HELOC
CMG Financial 70% LTV
Consolidated CCU, high LTV NOO LOC, OR, WA
East West Bank, up to 60% LTV with "no docs" San Fran area
Figure 80% on a rental, not in LLC
Finance of America, 95% CLTV, second home only, 680 FICO, not TX
FirstBank CO and AZ 75% LTV
First Florida Credit Union https://firstflorida.cumortgag...
First Commonwealth
First Midwest, IL up to 90% Chicago area
First Tech Federal. Wester states. Up to 80% if FICO is over 780, no appraisal under $250k value.
First Republic - California
Fremont Bank, California
Fulton Bank
GFA Federal Credit Union 10 yr draw, 10 yr repay, MA
Granite State CU, NH 90-100%
Great Lakes Credit Union
GTE Financial, FL w 2 yrs tax history on property
Hanscom FCU, Florida
HSBC 70%, for premier clients only
Horizon, Kalamazoo Michigan
Huntington 75% LTV 5 yr IO product available. Someone reported 80%…need confirmation
Hurst Lending and Insurance Investment property HELOC in Texas. No seasoning. Bridge, portfolio, foreign national and other specialty loan products.
Key Bank, FLorida flexible lender, HELOCs on second
homes and rental properties. 90% LTV on primary.
Merchants Bank MN See Pavel Ushakov
Mountain America CU Utah, ID, MT, NV, AZ, NM. 85% LTV, promo rate of 1.99%. Can refi an existing mortgage to a shorter term "Mini Mortgage."
Navy Federal 80% LTV
Norway Savings Bank, Maine
Omaha Mortgage
PenFed - max 3 other properties, including primary. 80% LTV, prime + 1%, <4 properties
Quorum Federal Credit Union 80% LTV, owned by LLC is OK. Very flexible lender. NY. 5 year draw, IO for 5 yrs and PI for 10 year repayment period.
Red Canoe Credit Union, WA OR
Regions- yes HELOC but no LOC
River Bank & Trust, AL
SCCU Florida 80% LTV, 2.75% first year promo, not LLC
SECU NC 65% LTV rate 2.75% Oct 2021
Signature Federal Credit Union 75% LTV (100% on primary residence)
Silvergate Bank
Sound CU "non-owner occupied HELOC, capped at $150K and interest rates are prime + 2%, 3% or 4%, based on credit, not to exceed 70% ltv."
S&T Pennsylvania
TCF Bank
TD Bank 75% line with FICO about 740. Up to 4 properties.
TIAA Direct was EverBank
Torrey Pines Bank
Troy Bank & Trust, AL
Trustco
Union Bank, specializes in noo HELOC. KCMO, NE
Union Bank, MUFG.
Upstate Bank in Rochester NY, LOC up to 80%
US Bank 80%
Vectra Bank - Colo
Veritex, Texas HELOC
WellsFargo 60% LTV Up to 5 properties.
Workers Credit Union, MA 80-100%
WSFS...up to 70% on rental
The GOAT post.
Post: Slow time of the year?

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
Keep looking, 3 offers is not much at all. Analyze 100, submit offers on 10, get 1.
Post: HouseHack or Invest Out of State

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
You could do both. You could use the money saved on rent after you acquire your first house hack to then invest in Cleveland or another midwest market.
Post: Property number Six!

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
Looks nice! Looks like a Linden or Hilltop double to me
Post: Interested in Start House Hacking

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
The VA loan is a great loan product to get a 1-4 unit rental property - you could entertain selling or refinancing out of the condo to free up your VA credit to do a better deal that would cash flow. You could also go another owner occupied loan route such as FHA or Home Possible (assuming you've lived in that condo for 12+ months) on a multi-family that would cash flow, you'd need around 3-5% down on that. Or if you wanted to go the pure non-owner occupied investment property route you could do 15-20% down on a single family or 25% down on a 2-4 unit or 20-25% down on a 5+ unit.
It really depends on your financial situation and openness to owner occupying again or not.
Post: Looking for Investor friendly appraiser in the Columbus Ohio area

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
I'm confused what your question is?
Yes your hard money lender will need 1. an appraisal 2. a walk through from a rehab inspector.
Post: BRRRR using Hard Money? Is it possible?

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
Yes it happens every day with a majority of investors. If you can find a good deal and have a good rehab team its a no brainer in my opinion. The one caveat is if you have boat loads of cash and can get a higher return than 10% in the market, then it would make sense to self fund your rehabs. Just my opinion.
Post: Can someone help me setup a OHIO LLC

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
This is not legal advice. https://bsportal.ohiosos.gov/ or contact an attorney in Ohio.
Post: How to determine rents in an area?

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
You can pull comps with Rentometer.com or by checking for actively listed properties on zillow or apartments.com and see what comparable listings look like.
Post: Looking for cash flow in Ohio

- Real Estate Agent
- Columbus Cleveland Dayton, OH
- Posts 1,877
- Votes 1,837
You need close to 1% rules to cash flow I've found