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Buying, Managing Small Properties Can Pay Off
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Date: January 10, 2007
Even in today's uncertain climate, a hands-on real estate investor can make money with smaller properties. Here's how to get started.
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Even in today’s uncertain climate, a
hands-on real estate investor can make money with smaller properties
that are easy to acquire and manage.
Here are some suggestions to get started:
- Rent out a part of your own
home for $400 a month and use that money every month to pay down
mortgage principal. Shaving 10 years from a $350,000 30-year mortgage
will reduce total payments by more than $165,000. And you will be able
to write off all your costs on your income taxes, including
depreciation on the unit, up to your actual rental income.
- If buying a single family
home, make sure you can put 10 percent down and rent the property for
more than your monthly payment, interest, taxes, insurance and a $200
expense budget. Low-balling a foreclosed home owned by a lender is one
way to find such a property.
- Consider buying a
two-family home, where you’ll make nearly twice as much in rent for a
property costing little or no more than a single family.
Source: The Wall Street Journal, David Crook (01/10/2007)
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