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Financing for 2nd home

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  • #16
    Originally posted by Tangler View Post

    I think many rent out a second home as a rationalization to help them feel less guilty for indulging in an unnecessary consumption item.
    You have a rather pessimistic view of a 2nd home and your wife does not seem interested so I'm not sure it will happen.
    ​​​​We wanted a vacation home near the beach with warm weather year round where we can plant tropical fruit trees in our back yard. We have a newborn so we won't have time nor need for it for at least another 5 yrs but bought one to take advantage of the low interest rate and rented it out. Broke even after paying all expenses and 15 yr mortgage. I think there are many reasons and many ways to do it that may make sense. Real estate is very flexible.

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    • #17
      Originally posted by GIMD View Post

      You have a rather pessimistic view of a 2nd home and your wife does not seem interested so I'm not sure it will happen.
      ​​​​We wanted a vacation home near the beach with warm weather year round where we can plant tropical fruit trees in our back yard. We have a newborn so we won't have time nor need for it for at least another 5 yrs but bought one to take advantage of the low interest rate and rented it out. Broke even after paying all expenses and 15 yr mortgage. I think there are many reasons and many ways to do it that may make sense. Real estate is very flexible.
      Congratulations! That sounds wonderful!

      Citrus trees! Magical! I would love that.

      Second home: by definition it is a second house and thus not essential.

      Am i pessimistic or conservative and careful?

      You might be right, but RE is a very inefficient market and docs (in my opinion) are frequently at an informational disadvantage.

      There will be winners and losers in inefficient markets.

      Coastal RE has a lot of variables.

      Second home.

      We can disagree with wether it is an investment and/or a luxury consumption item.

      It sounds like you did really well.

      You might be better at this than I am.

      I live near Boston and I am looking at Cape cod.

      Love it! 1.5 hour drive. Great fishing!

      Homes i like are around 400-700k.

      If I buy for example, a 500k house, how much rental per year (month) would i need for it to be a good investment?

      What cap rate is acceptable?

      My hard core RE buddy (in Florida, 20+ rentals uses a cap rate (R) of 8-10% for good “investments”.

      If the desired investment cap rate (R) of 10% (what my RE investment buddy uses) how much monthly and yearly net operating income (NOI) would I need for it to be a “great/good” investment?

      Value = NOI/R

      therefore NOI = value x R

      Value = 500k, I would need a NOI (net operating income) of 50k per year or $4,167 per month.

      Is that possible? reasonable? likely?

      Perhaps but the NOI by definition is minus vacancies, expenses, utilities, repairs, and management costs.

      I imagine some crush it and some don’t.

      I am a very simple average doc and I don’t think of myself as special or talented so i will probably just assume the worst and proceed with caution.

      My wife says: “you can rent a lot of beach houses for 500k……”

      I say, “yeah honey but……i could keep my stuff here and plant trees and build a green house and retire here……she rolls her eyes…..one house, one spouse…..blah blah”

      She did say: “maybe…..one day…”
      when i showed her an awesome one, but she might have just felt sorry for me.

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