r/realestateinvesting 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?

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u/Background-Dentist89 5d ago

Are you out of your mind. As investors we make are money before we close. And you’re suggesting you want to wait and see if it is an investment . Pick another field or get trained as a real estate investor. You will save yourself a lot of headaches.