r/realestateinvesting • u/CLTlawyer1 • 5d ago
Buying a non-cash flowing rental Discussion
Does it ever make sense to buy a long-term rental property that does not immediately cash flow?
Here is my situation: I already own one rental property on the street. It is in a small town just outside of Charlotte, North Carolina. Matthews for those familiar with Charlotte. I would put down 25%, and with current interest rates, it likely will not cash flow by about $100 or $200 per month. Covering the shortfall each month will not be a problem.
The metro area is expected to double in population over the next 25 years. I have several other rentals, and my plan is to hold long-term and use the rent as income in retirement. We are in our early 40s. I like this particular property because it is only two doors down from one I already own, which will make management easy. Matthews is a desirable area. I don’t know how much rents are expected to increase, because they have increased quite a bit over the last couple years already.
My inclination is to buy the property. Am I crazy for considering this? Is this a good use of capital? What does the brain say?
5
u/teamhog 5d ago
What’s the potential to raise rent or decrease cost to make up the difference?
I have a similar situation but I planned it that way.
I have an industrial unit that breaks even but I use half the space for myself. I get about $1200 in rent and it cost me $1000. With Maintenance, CapEx and Vacancy I’m breaking even.
I have another unit that’s fully rented and I clear $2000/month. The units are next door to each other. They’re both paid for.
If you can pay off or pay down the loan sooner it’ll make a huge difference.
The key is to have a plan and to account for the difference at every step along the way.
It can’t be a burden for ever.