I knew a landlord who evicted a tenant for nonpayment. When it came time to clean up he discovered she had dumped cat litter down the drilled well. He moved the trailer out and that lot set empty for 15 years.


Honestly, your probably is worth that, depending on property, location, markets, ect.My wife and I drove by a house for sale down the road from us.
1900 ft2 with 6 acres in an ok location
House built in 1960s and everything in it dated.
They are asking $200k.
Back in 2017 we paid $250k for a 2500ft2 house that was well kept and 45 acres for $250k.
I guess our property is worth at least $600k.![]()
True. We built on 8 acres in 2018 for $275k. Now sitting on about $500k.
That's life.
That is the effect of increasing the money supply since 2019 at a pace not seen since the federal reserve was created. A 5 gallon bucket used to be .99 and they are now 4.99.True. We built on 8 acres in 2018 for $275k. Now sitting on about $500k.
That's life.
Ain’t that the truth…That is the effect of increasing the money supply since 2019 at a pace not seen since the federal reserve was created. A 5 gallon bucket used to be .99 and they are now 4.99.
You left out optional rent payments during the COVID era.Wonder why we hear about shortage of housing and my first thought is who would willingly enter the business knowing the risks?
Maybe soon, that a five gallon bucket filled with dollar bills will have more value than the money in it.That is the effect of increasing the money supply since 2019 at a pace not seen since the federal reserve was created. A 5 gallon bucket used to be .99 and they are now 4.99.
All of these costs will be reflected in rental price increases, from larger property management firms, allowing the independents to also raise their pricing.I can manage rentals but what has happened in the last 20 years to housing providers to get bad tenants out is a travesty...
Maybe, depending on location.All of these costs will be reflected in rental price increases, from larger property management firms, allowing the independents to also raise their pricing.
If lawmakers are going to pass stupid laws to protect deadbeats, it only costs the honest customers more. A rental market that routinely operates at a loss will cease to exist, altogether.
There are high paid professionals with SF rent controlled apartments that hit the lottery as they pay a fraction of market.Wow. Losing proposition, in every way.
If successful, it'll be good incentive for no one to ever buy property in CA, it'll be far cheaper to just rent!
Whoever wrote that 60% rule must not understand basic compounding, the gap will only grow with time. If CPI averages around 4% for 10 years, the landlord's approximate costs go up 48%, but they can only increase rents by 27%. Brilliant.
The landlords costs will double every ~18 years, at least those that track with CPI, yet rents will only double after 30 years!
Down here, that would be a pretty fair asking price. Maybe go for $250k, but it would likely have some possible hits at $299kTaking a ride out in the country in our SxS my wife and I saw another house for sale. 2000 ft2 with 4 acres. House built in 1970's.
Asking price is $299k. That house will sit and rot at that price. Maybe worth $150k if you're feeling generous.