Quote:
Originally Posted by glassman
So given that scenerio, "if" someone was to buy a small apartment complex for cash, besides the fact you have to constantly babysit and maintain, it keeps up with inflation. What is the national average of % of property management fees?
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First of all -- it doesn't pay to buy REAL ESTATE - especially commercial real estate with "cash" -- it pays to put a healthy down payment (the LLC's I invest in use 40% down). The key to making money on rental real estate is to be able to leverage up. Let the tenant(s) make your payments --- and be able to utilize the depreciation to shelter the income. I say SHELTER because when the building is sold -- you're going to recapture all that depreciation. Now we're getting way over Investing 102.... but in a nutshell --- you'll want to use the cash for the down -- leverage for growth -- and the depreciation to minimize taxes during ownership.
Pro management fees vary -- but normal is 5% or so.
There's LOTS to learn about buying rental real estate. Which is why I invest with professionals that only do this sort of work. We typically like to buy a property that is "under market" in rent... for some reason or another - maybe bad previous management -- maybe because the building is aging - maybe they aren't competitive with amenities... But what we want is the potential to come in and re-position the property to be able to charge the market rates going forward. That can mean MAJOR remodeling of the units -- adding amenities - or redoing parking and pools and landscaping and paint and roof etc. That takes CASH... so you'd better have that all planned for in advance.
The last property I invested in - we completely remodeled every unit as they became vacant... the rents on those units are now UP 50% from when we bought and the property brings in $25,000 more per month than it did when we bought it. Doing all the remodeling reduced the cash flow from the property to ZERO for about 2 years... (that's called INVESTING).
Commercial properties are priced based on their revenues etc. They're not priced like your house. In order for an investor to make "X" return based on the current revenue - an investor can only pay "X" for the property. You have to factor the returns based on the prevailing financing... upgrades... future potential of the rents in the surrounding area etc.
You also NEED to know who your competition is! What is the market for X square feet with similar amenities... is there any new properties planned for your area? Is the area a bunch of generation Y's -- single -- no kids and your building is mostly set up for families?? Or vice versa?
There's a lot to it - like most things - if you want to put the chance of success on your side.
This is the one I own a quarter of in Seattle... it was a dump when we bought it -- didn't have washer and dryers... and was ugly colored and outdated.
http://sierraongreenwood.com