franklin wrote:
What kills me is the guy who says he doesn't have the rent yet but the kids playing in the yard tell me they just got a new flat screen TV and a bunch of new video games. I have found that there is a breed of folk out there who are professional moochers, paying on time for a few months and then falling behind, only to move out in the middle of the night owing a bunch and trashing the place.
97guns wrote:just wondering if any rental property owners here have put any thought into possible scenarios if the dollar collapses, it would be nice to compare my thoughts to yours. i have rental property that is my sole source of income, so yes it is a concern to me.
97guns wrote:just wondering if any rental property owners here have put any thought into possible scenarios if the dollar collapses, it would be nice to compare my thoughts to yours. i have rental property that is my sole source of income, so yes it is a concern to me.
franklin wrote:Mossy:
re: making a big deal out of religion.
My first rental house was about 10 miles out in the country and when we first advertised it as being available, was contacted by a guy and his wife who wanted it but were leaving to go to Mexico to give out bibles and couldn't pay for rent for 6 months but wanted to move in RIGHT THEN! I politely declined because I needed the cash flow after purchasing the place and they tried to make me feel like feces for not trusting them to pay later.
They were going to be gone for 6 months, leaving the house empty?franklin wrote: My first rental house was about 10 miles out in the country and when we first advertised it as being available, was contacted by a guy and his wife who wanted it but were leaving to go to Mexico ... couldn't pay for rent for 6 months but wanted to move in RIGHT THEN! ...
BamaJoe wrote:97guns wrote:just wondering if any rental property owners here have put any thought into possible scenarios if the dollar collapses, it would be nice to compare my thoughts to yours. i have rental property that is my sole source of income, so yes it is a concern to me.
In the scenario you mention of a dollar collapse you would have hyperinflation in the picture. My concern would be getting paid in worthless paper. For example in the situation of a lease with 10 months left @ $1000 a month when the dollar collapsed then the renters would be thrilled to keep paying you that $1000/month since it might be the cost of a postage stamp.
No82s wrote:BamaJoe wrote:97guns wrote:just wondering if any rental property owners here have put any thought into possible scenarios if the dollar collapses, it would be nice to compare my thoughts to yours. i have rental property that is my sole source of income, so yes it is a concern to me.
In the scenario you mention of a dollar collapse you would have hyperinflation in the picture. My concern would be getting paid in worthless paper. For example in the situation of a lease with 10 months left @ $1000 a month when the dollar collapsed then the renters would be thrilled to keep paying you that $1000/month since it might be the cost of a postage stamp.
Assuming there is a bank note on the property, you also would then be paying it off with worthless paper - unless its an adjustable rate.
franklin wrote:Mossy:
re: making a big deal out of religion.
My first rental house was about 10 miles out in the country and when we first advertised it as being available, was contacted by a guy and his wife who wanted it but were leaving to go to Mexico to give out bibles and couldn't pay for rent for 6 months but wanted to move in RIGHT THEN! I politely declined because I needed the cash flow after purchasing the place and they tried to make me feel like feces for not trusting them to pay later.
Rodebaugh wrote:Currently hunting for new tenants for my wife's rental. Listen closely and you can hear my hair falling out. Thank goodness I have a very good person fielding the calls for me and setting up view slots.
Property:
Look down into the WVU football stadium from back deck w/ walking distance to WV's best hospital (and dental school)......$1350/month...no cats....any takers?
Am I worried? every second of every day, but inflation has nothing to do with it.
97guns wrote:Rodebaugh wrote:Currently hunting for new tenants for my wife's rental. Listen closely and you can hear my hair falling out. Thank goodness I have a very good person fielding the calls for me and setting up view slots.
Property:
Look down into the WVU football stadium from back deck w/ walking distance to WV's best hospital (and dental school)......$1350/month...no cats....any takers?
Am I worried? every second of every day, but inflation has nothing to do with it.
property near colleges are usually easily rentable, look into the potential tennants vehicle to see if its a pig sty. if it is chances are very good he will live in your house the same way, also check to see if his tags are current. you can call all the references in the world, he controlls who you call. he can easily have you calling his buddies as his work/prior rental references.
barrytrot wrote:There is no religion that promotes being a jerk. There is no religion that promotes not paying your bills!
misteroman wrote:lol, I guess I better chime in here. I currently have 72 rental units. some commercial, most residential. some days I hate it, some days you love it. bought my 1st place at 21 or 22 and never looked back. I'm 36 now and the last few yrs I decided not to even look at residential anymore. My plan nowdays is almost like I used to play monopoly, buy all you can in a certain area that way you have a little more control over your surrounding. I live on a smallish Island (21k people) and am trying to corner most of the commercial RE that way you can control rent, which I NEVER raise unless taxes go up.period. I cant imagine more people not getting into RE atleast in the rental aspect. You invest a small amount of money up front and then your tenants pay off our mortgage and repairs for ya. If you have any brain what so ever YOU WILL MAKE MONEY!!!!! After about 10yrs of mentoring a friend of mine work with, hes finally buying a place off of me. of course if he'd have bought it 10yrs ago, he could've paid it off by now.
LOL I guess I went offtopic a little bit but I'm just very passionate about RE.
As far as the dollar collapse, yes its going to happen, BUT there will be another type of currency will take its place and then I'll just take that for rent
97guns wrote:misteroman wrote:lol, I guess I better chime in here. I currently have 72 rental units. some commercial, most residential. some days I hate it, some days you love it. bought my 1st place at 21 or 22 and never looked back. I'm 36 now and the last few yrs I decided not to even look at residential anymore. My plan nowdays is almost like I used to play monopoly, buy all you can in a certain area that way you have a little more control over your surrounding. I live on a smallish Island (21k people) and am trying to corner most of the commercial RE that way you can control rent, which I NEVER raise unless taxes go up.period. I cant imagine more people not getting into RE atleast in the rental aspect. You invest a small amount of money up front and then your tenants pay off our mortgage and repairs for ya. If you have any brain what so ever YOU WILL MAKE MONEY!!!!! After about 10yrs of mentoring a friend of mine work with, hes finally buying a place off of me. of course if he'd have bought it 10yrs ago, he could've paid it off by now.
LOL I guess I went offtopic a little bit but I'm just very passionate about RE.
As far as the dollar collapse, yes its going to happen, BUT there will be another type of currency will take its place and then I'll just take that for rent
very nice rock youve carved out for yourself, i picked my first up at 24, it was a triplex in las vegas. i soon found out that long range landlording does not work. i held the property for 4 years and went through 3 property managers, all of them were gambling with my money at the casino. i ended up dumping it for a 5K profit, 5 years later when housing crashed a had a nice chunk of change saved up. 2 are paid off and the other 2 have smallish motgages that im able to turn $450 positive on each. im content with the 4 i have, its more income than i need and i dont have to work for it thats what makes me so passionate about real estate.
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