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All Forum Posts by: Troy Garrett

Troy Garrett has started 2 posts and replied 5 times.

Post: Using a HELOC on a manufactured home

Troy GarrettPosted
  • Newberg, OR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 0

@Brent Coombs

As for whether or not the banks take the land into account o don’t see why they wouldn’t. If I were to default on the loan they wouldn’t be trying to sell just the home, they would be selling the entire estate which would be around what I paid for it. I don’t understand how the banks work yet.

Post: Using a HELOC on a manufactured home

Troy GarrettPosted
  • Newberg, OR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 0

@Brent Coombs

Thank you for responding. This is (believe it or not) the home we’ve been looking for. It is in the county so lower taxes and it’s next door to my in-laws (that’s pretty weird too but we have a great relationship and our young kids can go back and forth to the grandparents anytime). As a dream home would be, this isn’t it but it has everything we need and it’s very nice, owned by an old couple that had it specially designed for them when they retired. So selling it isn’t an option right now.

Post: Using a HELOC on a manufactured home

Troy GarrettPosted
  • Newberg, OR
  • Posts 5
  • Votes 0

I'm trying to get my first BRRRR going and I'm running into a wall. My plan was to use a HELOC in my current residence to get the ball rolling. Its a custom 3 piece manufactured home built in 2001 but it's not considered a modular home because it's attached to the steel frame it was built on. I'm finding that a manufactured home is pretty worthless in the eyes of the banks in regards to second mortgages or loans backed by it as collateral. We put $100k down so my assumption was that I had that equity in it at least if I were to sell it again. Our market has gone up considerably since we bought it two years ago so I have much more equity in it from when we bought it.

The issue I’m finding is that even though it’s on the piers, tied down, sitting on a block foundation with crawl space it’s still considered a mobile home because it’s built on a steel frame. The banks (both local credit unions and banks far and wide) are only seeing the home and not the land together. This property is real estate. The county has changed the deed to reflect the title for the home has been changed and the land and home are now one, not two separate taxable items. Apparently the banks only look at the value of the home and determined manufactured homes aren’t worth anything. They didn’t have a problem getting me a mortgage to purchase it to begin with but it’s apparently of no value after that 😀. 

With that being said, has anyone ever run into this issue and what have you done to get around this. I'm by no means giving up and I will get my first property by the end of the year one way or another but this wild be the best way to get a BRRRR started.

Thanks for all of your input. 

Originally posted by @Brian Garrett:

You need to have cash reserves to cover the holding costs during the rehab.

 Hey great last name Brian!

Getting ready to pull the trigger on my first deal when I thought to myself, how am I going to make the HELOC payments every month while not touching my personal bank account? Not that it would be a huge payment but I'm trying to find a way to do it while keeping it totally separate from my personal accounts. Ideas on how you did it would be appreciated!