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Casual Articles - How To Invest In Rental Houses
How to Shop for Florida Homeowner Insurance u want to have just a few rentals and you enjoy fixing toilets and arguing with late-paying renters, you can do everything yourself. However, if you want to be a real estate investor and really make some money, your time is better spent finding and buying new properties than repairing broken windows. How many properties could you handle if you did everything yourself? Hire help when you need it.Florida is one of the most popular places in our country to live. From the great weather to the numerous attractions to the amazing tax code, in all honesty – who would not want to live in Florida? If you have recently moved to Florida, then chances are that you have yet to invest in a suitable homeowner insurance policy, something that you may have been putting off. After all, who really wants to pay for insurance that they will probably never use? However, it is a different situation in Florida because of one major factor. Hurricanes. Each and every year, hurricanes roll thorough most of Florida, and if your home is not protected by Florida homeowner insurance, you stand to lose all of your valuables in an instant.When looking for Florida homeowner insurance, there are a few things that you really need to keep in mind. For the most part, homeowner insurance will cover Can You Get Cash Flow? Probably the biggest problem with buying single-family homes is that it can be tough to get positive cash flow. This has become a bigger problem recently, because for years now the prices of homes have been rising faster than rents. What can you do about this? First of all, I don't recommend the common practice of buying properties that lose money every month, on the assumption that you can make your profit when you sell them in a couple years. This strategy is about to get a lot of investors in trouble soon, because home prices in many areas have stopped rising or even started falling (I'm writing this in December of 2006). Al Is Your Web Site Ready For Its Visitors? As long as you have positive cash flow, rental homes are a great long-term way to make money in real estate. It is an inflation adjusted retirement plan, since rent - and so your income - goes up with inflation. The downside? Landlording isn't much fun, and you typically wait a long time for the big pay-off.There’s a great interest among the Internet entrepreneurs about how to promote their business on the Web. There’s always a quest for new and innovative ways of promotion that promise greater results at lower cost and in shorter time. Yet with all the efforts spent on promotion it’s just amazing how many people totally ignore one basic question- is their website is worth of promoting it? With new computer technologies and high speed connections the new age on the Internet has arrived- the age that redefined the criteria of a successful web site, which satisfies demands of its visitors.Content is the king.That was the mantra of all web masters for a long time. Just show your visitors some interesting stuff, give them a better deal – and your success is guaranteed. The truth is – it doesn’t work that way. The content alone cannot win you the hearts and minds of your Many people confuse making money from rental homes with making money speculating on price appreciation. You can certainly get do both with rental homes. However, this desire to gamble on rising prices leads many to buy rental homes that have more money going out than coming in. It is hard to argue that you shouldn't do this if you just sold a home for $120,000 that you bought for $90,000 two years ago - even if you had negative cash flow of $3,000 per year. This is risky, however. You could quickly find yourself in trouble if you own several such investments and they don't go up in value. Another important point is that there is a limit to how many negative-cash-flow homes you can own. At a loss of $3,000 per year, how many can YOU afford? On the other hand, if your rental homes are paying for themselves and even throwing off some real cash flow, you can own any number of them, right. The more the better! Obviously, then, my number one recommendation is to buy rental homes that will have positive cash flow from the first month you own them. Think about this for a moment. If you bought a home for $90,000 and thirty years later it DROPS in value to $60,000, but meanwhile you paid off the loan and had cash flow the whole time, you're doing great. You have $60,000 cash whenever you want to sell, and better cash flow now that the loan payments are done. That is much more secure than gambling on appreciation while losing money - but you still get any appreciation gains anyhow. Rental Houses - The How To Being a landlord and making money with rental homes is a big job. There are many great books that can help you avoid the hardest kind of learning - learning from your own mistakes. I recommend getting educated. In the meantime, here are some common mistakes that investors make with rental homes. Watch out for these. Mistake : Not accounting for all expenses. You hear something like this all the time: "The mortgage is $800, and the rent is $900, so my cash flow is $100 per month." You even see real estate books and course that fall prey to this kind of fast and sloppy accounting. Cash flow is what you have (or hope to have) after all your regular expenses, which include taxes, insurance, maintenance, repairs, water bills, utility bills between tenants, garbage collection, advertising costs, and anything else that it costs to have that home. Mistake : Assuming too much income. If the rent is $1,000 per month, the rental income for the year will be $12,000, right? Only if you are very lucky! You have to plan on some vacancies. If tenants in the area stay around for a year on average, and it takes a month to clean and re-rent a home, plan on $1,000 less, or $11,000 annual income. Mistake : Saving money by not repairing things or making necessary safety improvements. This short term way to increase cash flow is often referred to as slumlording. Long term, it means not just lower rental income for you, but more problem tenants. Consider the math and you'll see the logic of having a nice place. New carpet and repairing a dangerous porch might cost $3,000, but if you roll it into a refinancing (let's say a 7% 30-year loan) it adds just $20 per month to your expenses. Even on a credit card it might cost you only $60 per month. You might be able to get that much more in rent for a nicer place, and you'll have fewer problems. Mistake : Not doing a background check on prospective tenants. I once rented to a woman who admitted to doing jail time for driving without insurance. She seemed very honest and up front about it, so I didn't investigate further. I later discovered that she actually had been arrested for writing bad checks - a lot more relevant information for a landlord. She ended up in jail again, and was of course unable to pay rent. I could have gotten a simple criminal background check and avoided the problem. Check out those tenants. Mistake : Trying to do too much by yourself. If you want to have just a few rentals and you enjoy fixing toilets and arguing with late-paying renters, you can do everything yourself. However, if you want to be a real estate investor and really make some money, your time is better spent finding and buying new properties than repairing broken windows. How many properties could you handle if you did everything yourself? Hire help when you need it. Can You Get Cash Flow? Probably the biggest problem with buying single-family homes is that it can be tough to get positive cash flow. This has become a bigger problem recently, because for years now the prices of homes have been rising faster than rents. What can you do about this? First of all, I don't recommend the common practice of buying properties that lose money every month, on the assumption that you can make your profit when you sell them in a couple years. This strategy is about to get a lot of investors in trouble soon, because home prices in many areas have stopped rising or even started falling (I'm writing this in December of 2006). Al Internet Marketing - A Foray Into Forums er hand, if your rental homes are paying for themselves and even throwing off some real cash flow, you can own any number of them, right. The more the better!There are various ways to bring traffic to your site. One that is not promoted very often is driving traffic through the use of forums. The reason might be because it is quite a tedious method to work with and it doesn’t yield great results. However, there may be some out there who already use forums on a regular basis. so for that reason it is probably worth mentioning to others.In order to pursue this marketing method go to the search engines and bring up forums preceded by the nature of your product. For example if you are involved in affiliate marketing you would enter that name plus forums. You will find slews of information on this subject.Make a study of the various forums and select the ones that look most interesting. It will be necessary for you to join any you choose. You should familiarize yourself with several and answer any questions you are knowledg Obviously, then, my number one recommendation is to buy rental homes that will have positive cash flow from the first month you own them. Think about this for a moment. If you bought a home for $90,000 and thirty years later it DROPS in value to $60,000, but meanwhile you paid off the loan and had cash flow the whole time, you're doing great. You have $60,000 cash whenever you want to sell, and better cash flow now that the loan payments are done. That is much more secure than gambling on appreciation while losing money - but you still get any appreciation gains anyhow. Rental Houses - The How To Being a landlord and making money with rental homes is a big job. There are many great books that can help you avoid the hardest kind of learning - learning from your own mistakes. I recommend getting educated. In the meantime, here are some common mistakes that investors make with rental homes. Watch out for these. Mistake : Not accounting for all expenses. You hear something like this all the time: "The mortgage is $800, and the rent is $900, so my cash flow is $100 per month." You even see real estate books and course that fall prey to this kind of fast and sloppy accounting. Cash flow is what you have (or hope to have) after all your regular expenses, which include taxes, insurance, maintenance, repairs, water bills, utility bills between tenants, garbage collection, advertising costs, and anything else that it costs to have that home. Mistake : Assuming too much income. If the rent is $1,000 per month, the rental income for the year will be $12,000, right? Only if you are very lucky! You have to plan on some vacancies. If tenants in the area stay around for a year on average, and it takes a month to clean and re-rent a home, plan on $1,000 less, or $11,000 annual income. Mistake : Saving money by not repairing things or making necessary safety improvements. This short term way to increase cash flow is often referred to as slumlording. Long term, it means not just lower rental income for you, but more problem tenants. Consider the math and you'll see the logic of having a nice place. New carpet and repairing a dangerous porch might cost $3,000, but if you roll it into a refinancing (let's say a 7% 30-year loan) it adds just $20 per month to your expenses. Even on a credit card it might cost you only $60 per month. You might be able to get that much more in rent for a nicer place, and you'll have fewer problems. Mistake : Not doing a background check on prospective tenants. I once rented to a woman who admitted to doing jail time for driving without insurance. She seemed very honest and up front about it, so I didn't investigate further. I later discovered that she actually had been arrested for writing bad checks - a lot more relevant information for a landlord. She ended up in jail again, and was of course unable to pay rent. I could have gotten a simple criminal background check and avoided the problem. Check out those tenants. Mistake : Trying to do too much by yourself. If you want to have just a few rentals and you enjoy fixing toilets and arguing with late-paying renters, you can do everything yourself. However, if you want to be a real estate investor and really make some money, your time is better spent finding and buying new properties than repairing broken windows. How many properties could you handle if you did everything yourself? Hire help when you need it. Can You Get Cash Flow? Probably the biggest problem with buying single-family homes is that it can be tough to get positive cash flow. This has become a bigger problem recently, because for years now the prices of homes have been rising faster than rents. What can you do about this? First of all, I don't recommend the common practice of buying properties that lose money every month, on the assumption that you can make your profit when you sell them in a couple years. This strategy is about to get a lot of investors in trouble soon, because home prices in many areas have stopped rising or even started falling (I'm writing this in December of 2006). Al Get Rich Quick? ch out for these.Would you go to the grocery store, come home and put the groceries away, sit down and wait for your supper to make itself? Of course not.Would you get out the dust mop, the broom or the vacuum cleaner and expect the house to clean itself? Of course you wouldn’t.Then why do you expect that if you purchase the latest product being promoted, download it to your computer and/or set it up as a webpage, and then just sit back, that the money will start rolling in?In order to achieve any of our goals, unless our goal is to be a lazy couch potato, it is important to work at them. Actually, even a lazy couch potato has to work at his goal. He has to restrict himself to not walking to the fridge too often, but having all his snacks surrounding him. He has to make sure the battery is in the remote, otherwise he might have to actually get up to change the channel. Mistake : Not accounting for all expenses. You hear something like this all the time: "The mortgage is $800, and the rent is $900, so my cash flow is $100 per month." You even see real estate books and course that fall prey to this kind of fast and sloppy accounting. Cash flow is what you have (or hope to have) after all your regular expenses, which include taxes, insurance, maintenance, repairs, water bills, utility bills between tenants, garbage collection, advertising costs, and anything else that it costs to have that home. Mistake : Assuming too much income. If the rent is $1,000 per month, the rental income for the year will be $12,000, right? Only if you are very lucky! You have to plan on some vacancies. If tenants in the area stay around for a year on average, and it takes a month to clean and re-rent a home, plan on $1,000 less, or $11,000 annual income. Mistake : Saving money by not repairing things or making necessary safety improvements. This short term way to increase cash flow is often referred to as slumlording. Long term, it means not just lower rental income for you, but more problem tenants. Consider the math and you'll see the logic of having a nice place. New carpet and repairing a dangerous porch might cost $3,000, but if you roll it into a refinancing (let's say a 7% 30-year loan) it adds just $20 per month to your expenses. Even on a credit card it might cost you only $60 per month. You might be able to get that much more in rent for a nicer place, and you'll have fewer problems. Mistake : Not doing a background check on prospective tenants. I once rented to a woman who admitted to doing jail time for driving without insurance. She seemed very honest and up front about it, so I didn't investigate further. I later discovered that she actually had been arrested for writing bad checks - a lot more relevant information for a landlord. She ended up in jail again, and was of course unable to pay rent. I could have gotten a simple criminal background check and avoided the problem. Check out those tenants. Mistake : Trying to do too much by yourself. If you want to have just a few rentals and you enjoy fixing toilets and arguing with late-paying renters, you can do everything yourself. However, if you want to be a real estate investor and really make some money, your time is better spent finding and buying new properties than repairing broken windows. How many properties could you handle if you did everything yourself? Hire help when you need it. Can You Get Cash Flow? Probably the biggest problem with buying single-family homes is that it can be tough to get positive cash flow. This has become a bigger problem recently, because for years now the prices of homes have been rising faster than rents. What can you do about this? First of all, I don't recommend the common practice of buying properties that lose money every month, on the assumption that you can make your profit when you sell them in a couple years. This strategy is about to get a lot of investors in trouble soon, because home prices in many areas have stopped rising or even started falling (I'm writing this in December of 2006). Al Stock Market Investment Guide mlording. Long term, it means not just lower rental income for you, but more problem tenants. Consider the math and you'll see the logic of having a nice place. New carpet and repairing a dangerous porch might cost $3,000, but if you roll it into a refinancing (let's say a 7% 30-year loan) it adds just $20 per month to your expenses. Even on a credit card it might cost you only $60 per month. You might be able to get that much more in rent for a nicer place, and you'll have fewer problems.
Mistake : Not doing a background check on prospective tenants.How does the stock market work? This is a question that most novice investors ask their financial advisors. If you want to know the answer to this question then you should first learn what the stock market is. The stock market, simply put, is a market where companies and entities can finance their operation by offering shares of company stocks, bonds and derivatives to the public. Currently there is a huge worldwide investment market valued at over $350 trillion U.S. This market is made up of about $300 trillion in derivatives, $45 trillion in bonds and $22.5 trillion in worldwide stocks.The next thing that you will need to learn about when you learn how the stock market works is how stocks, bonds and derivatives are offered to the public. There are several national and international markets that you can find investment product listings. One of these markets is the NASDA I once rented to a woman who admitted to doing jail time for driving without insurance. She seemed very honest and up front about it, so I didn't investigate further. I later discovered that she actually had been arrested for writing bad checks - a lot more relevant information for a landlord. She ended up in jail again, and was of course unable to pay rent. I could have gotten a simple criminal background check and avoided the problem. Check out those tenants. Mistake : Trying to do too much by yourself. If you want to have just a few rentals and you enjoy fixing toilets and arguing with late-paying renters, you can do everything yourself. However, if you want to be a real estate investor and really make some money, your time is better spent finding and buying new properties than repairing broken windows. How many properties could you handle if you did everything yourself? Hire help when you need it. Can You Get Cash Flow? Probably the biggest problem with buying single-family homes is that it can be tough to get positive cash flow. This has become a bigger problem recently, because for years now the prices of homes have been rising faster than rents. What can you do about this? First of all, I don't recommend the common practice of buying properties that lose money every month, on the assumption that you can make your profit when you sell them in a couple years. This strategy is about to get a lot of investors in trouble soon, because home prices in many areas have stopped rising or even started falling (I'm writing this in December of 2006). Al The 'How-To' of Home Financing u want to have just a few rentals and you enjoy fixing toilets and arguing with late-paying renters, you can do everything yourself. However, if you want to be a real estate investor and really make some money, your time is better spent finding and buying new properties than repairing broken windows. How many properties could you handle if you did everything yourself? Hire help when you need it.Negotiate lower interestLength of Loan, Interest Rate, and PointsThe longer the term and the higher the down payment, the lower your monthly payments will be. On the other side, the higher the term the high rate of interest you pay.· Here the rate of interest is very important because when the rate of interest is high, your monthly payment will also high.· Points are an amount of prepaid interest paid by the borrower to the lender at closing. A point is equal to 1 percent of the loan amount.Adjustable or Fixed:Mortgage loans have interest rates that will stay fixed for the life of the loan, that may change or represent a combination of fixed and variable rates. Most people use a fixed-rate mortgage. The benefit of that is , you always know exactly how much your mortgage payment will be, and you can plan for it. But fixed- Can You Get Cash Flow? Probably the biggest problem with buying single-family homes is that it can be tough to get positive cash flow. This has become a bigger problem recently, because for years now the prices of homes have been rising faster than rents. What can you do about this? First of all, I don't recommend the common practice of buying properties that lose money every month, on the assumption that you can make your profit when you sell them in a couple years. This strategy is about to get a lot of investors in trouble soon, because home prices in many areas have stopped rising or even started falling (I'm writing this in December of 2006). Also, how many negative income streams can your regular paycheck support? This is always a problem with investing in properties with negative cash flow. With positive cash flow, you can own as many as you want. One way to get that positive cash flow is to invest in mobile homes on land. These often rent for close to what small homes get, but cost less than half as much. Other ways to get positive cash flow involve either finding ways to reduce expenses or increase income, or both. Here are some ways to do that: 1. Lower payments. If you can't get a lower interest rate from the bank, see if you can get seller financing. Also, amortize the loan over 30 years, not 15. 2. Lower operating costs. Look for any unnecessary expenses that the property has,but which can be cut. These might include getting a cheaper management company, finding cheaper insurance, and getting the property taxes lowered if the property is over-assessed. 3. Raise rent. Check area rents to see if an increase is feasible. Make improvements that will enable you to raise the rent more than enough to cover the cost of financing those improvements. 4. Lease it with an option. You can often collect higher-than-market rent when you lease a home and give the renters an option to buy it. Buying single-family homes as rentals is one of the easier ways to get started in real estate investing. If you do it only when and where you can get positive cash flow, it is also a very safe way to invest. Another big advantage it has, is that you have two markets for your properties when you are ready to sell them - both investors and regular home buyers.
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