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Max Cash Flow Now: Take Yourself on Vacation with Increased Rental Property Profit.

Max Cash Flow Now: Take Yourself on Vacation with Increased Rental Property Profit

Take yourself on vacation using your increased rental property income.  I was driving home in 11-degree temperatures from a meeting with one of our rental property owner/students.  He was telling me about his upcoming vacation to warm and sunny Mexico.  While some of you reading this are in warmer climes, most of us have been hit by an unusually cold winter and our minds go on vacation more often than our bodies!  We all could use a vacation to break up the winter months.

Our student mentioned that he skimmed a little off his rental income every month to add to his vacation fund.  Not a bad idea I thought as I watched the snow blowing along the side of the road.  In most rental situations, the property owner does not have anything at the end of the month to skim. What I heard our student/rental property owner say was “Before I worked with your program my gross rents were barely getting the expenses paid; now it does that twice over and leaves me a little play money.”  Oh, the joys of having a little play money – practically unheard of in this economy.

Not everyone would take this approach with the additional income they generate from their rental properties.  I understand.  Some would even think it bad business not to put the entire added profits back into their investment, but then again . . . live once and enjoy it!

There is so much room in the deal after transforming your rental property with our unique approach that considering taking a little every month and padding your vacation fund may not be such an imprudent idea.  How many rentals do you have right now that would help pay your way to Mexico or Hawaii this winter?

To learn more about our method download the FREE Ebook from the right side bar.

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Max Cash Flow Now: Income property can have very stable, respectful and reliable tenants.

Max Cash Flow Now: Income property can have very stable, respectful and reliable tenants.

Yes, that’s correct!  It all depends on product, location and first rate tenant screening.  If you don’t have all three, your vacancy rate will be elevated.  Let’s talk about product first.  We recommend to our students that they furnish their properties with clean serviceable items, new linens and art work on the walls.  What you are creating is an environment that is very agreeable to the tenant, one that not only the tenant will look forward to coming home to, but also one, through pictures on flyers, web sites and word of mouth, will draw new inquires.  We are all for building and keeping a pipeline.

Many furnished rooms for rent are not clean and be full of old, thread bear chairs, sofas, and soiled mattresses.  Would you want to stay any longer than you had to in a place that does not support a good sense of self-esteem?  Nicely furnished rooms generate good paying tenants, who stay for long periods.

Our preferred tenant populations  normally do not have their own transportation so proximity to public transportation is necessity.

Key to this equation within our system is good tenant screening, which strangely enough does not include credit or traditional background checks.  Our tenants are referred to us, so we gain knowledge about them and their history though direct questioning of people who are familiar with each possible tenant individually.  We discover personal background information and work experience.  This type of screening done methodically will produce good paying renters who stay for long periods creating a stable house.

To discover more about setting up transitional housing, please download our free Ebook from the right side bar.

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Max Cash Flow Now: How does your rental properties cap rate compare to other income producing properties.

Max Cash Flow Now: How does your rental properties cap rate compare to other income producing properties.

Since our method guarantees such a vast difference in cash flow from what is normally received from a single family and multi-family investment property we wanted to illustrate what investors in apartment houses do when they asses a deal.  They evaluate the profit potential of the property as opposed to what comparable properties recently sold for, to establish value.  Basically, how that investment is going to pay them back, similar to annual interest rate paid on an investment in a CD or Bond.  So the ratio between the sum invested and the net profit the asset produces is the cap rate.

By applying a certain criteria, someone investing in larger money producer, such as apartment buildings can determine a worthwhile investment and the same criteria can be used when looking at our system applied to your single family and smaller multi-family rentals.  A good deal for an investor in apartments is a cap rate of 10% or better.

annual net cash flow / total dollars invested in the property = Cap Rate

For illustration, if a single family residence (SFR) were acquired for $85,000 and it required $15,000 in remodel costs so the total investment would be $100,000.  Market rents for the neighborhood suggested that you could rent the property for $1,250 a month gross or $15,000 annually.  Deduct your total annual operating costs; principle, interest, taxes, insurance, property management/maintenance costs, (lets use $1,050 a month) to arrive at your net positive income.  So annualized operating costs would then be $12,600 annually, which leaves $2,400 in net annual cash flow.

$2,400 / $100,000 = 2.4% cap rate

It’s not unusual for a usual rental to cash flow $200 a month net. Naturally, the property owner is relying on the property’s ultimate market appreciation, and tax advantages, to evaluate their overall investment also.

Now apply our system, and rent the home at double market rates of $2,500.  Our suggested method does necessitate some additional operating expenses, so the monthly effective operating costs would now be $1,250 a month, thus providing $1,250 a month in net cash flow or $15,000 annually.

$15,000 / $100,000 = 15% cap rate

Now that’s much better and the envy of every apartment owner out there and you did it with a SFR.  It’s not completely passive income, it does call for some extra time, but not as much as one might think.  We teach ways to reduce management time considerably.

To learn how to increase your “Cap Rate,” download our free Ebook, Max Cash Flow Now, from the side bar.

Max Cash Flow Now: Outstanding cash flow for new student!

Outstanding cash flow for new student!


Newly opened transitional single family residence is producing outstanding cash flow for new student.

“We opened a 7 days ago, and we already have 2 renters. Both of these fellows were referred directly from the DOC and we can already tell they’re good guys who simply need a nice place to call home. The income potential on this place, even after paying the mortgage and utilities and maintenance is in excess of $1400.00 net profit per month.”

“Thanks Alf & Jeannie for talking with us initially, then educating us, and through your outstanding program. Your expertise, knowledge, experience and compassion are making a difference in peoples lives’. The benefits are not just the money, although great and needed, it is the heart that throbs and lives with excitement knowing everyone comes out a winner in using your method.”  Charlie Jackson, Sonrise Properties LLC

Here are some pictures of Charlie’s new home in Arvada Colorado.

The students we coach increase their net cash flow by as much as a thousand dollars in most cases.  Learn more about our method by download FREE Ebook, “Max Cash Flow Now” on the right sidebar.

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Max Cash Flow Now: Be a leader in your area by building ROI on investment properties.

Building ROI on your investment properties.

Max Cash Flow Now: Be a leader in your area by building ROI on investment properties.  A reader of this blog wondered why, “if this (our method) was such a good idea, why wasn’t anyone else doing it.”

We understood his concern and we can only respond with what we know to be true in our overwhelmingly successful Denver market.  This area is booming with transitional housing in all types of neighborhoods throughout the city and surrounding counties.

Presently when someone from this region calls us for information on opening a transitional house, we mildly discourage them.  That might not sound like good business on our part, but due to the number of investors who have witnessed this niche come alive and thrive over the past 18 months, we are approaching a saturation point.

It took about 12 months for the looky-loos to stand back and watch and collect information before they ventured into this lucrative opportunity.  Therefore, I really do understand the concern about being the first one to take a new path.  Consider though what those looky-loos lost in cash flow, property repair costs, bad tenants and evictions until they finally started thinking out of the box and work with a now proven system.

When we started, the local area boasted 12 beds in alternative housing.  With our very first house we brought the total up to 17.  We are now responsible for 64 beds.  There are other companies and individuals who have turned their rentals into transitional housing and we don’t have an exact count on them, but suffice it to say when the word gets out that something good is happening it doesn’t take long for others to jump on board.

It is an idea of the times, but few people have even thought about the need that is out there.  It boils down to a lack of awareness and education.  One in 6 people in the US has been or knows of someone who has been incarcerated.  We as a nation have the highest incarceration rate in the world.  Are they all bad guys?  When we think of men coming out of prison we think of gangstas and thugs, but often the crime is “soft” and the guy was in the wrong place at the wrong time hanging with the wrong people.  We teach our students how to screen applicants who are desperate to make their lives right again and not make the same stupid mistakes that got them into prison in the first place.  But really – who thinks of them – has the idea ever been brought up in a Real Estate Investment Association (REIA) meeting?  No – because it just has not yet been thought of, investigated and worked as a viable investment strategy in your area.

When we first started in this work we stood in front of a group of 220 investors and several wide-eyed individuals thought we were nuts!  However, we were bombarded with questions from every angle imaginable.  Denver has a pretty savvy investment climate yet no one had ever thought about this approach to increasing their cash flow and now as I said earlier the local area is saturated with transitional house landlords.

Find out if this concept is right for you.  Download our free Ebook, “Max Cash Flow Now,” on the right sidebar.

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Max Cash Flow Now: Build ROI with investment property through transitional housing.

Pic’s of Transtional Housing


Max Cash Flow Now: Build ROI with investment property through transitional housing.

We write a lot about increasing rental income 3 to 4 times by renting out individual furnished rooms.  But, what does a furnished transitional home look like?  Here are some interior pictures of some of our student’s homes.

Commen Area

Private Room

Private Room

Dining Area

Dining Area

Kitchen

Kitchen

Private Rm

Semi-Private

Semi-Private

Each home has been furnished with reconditioned, used or gifted furniture, fixtures and appliances at very reasonable costs, normally in the range of a one time cost of $400 to $600 per bed.  A schedule to repay yourself for this investment in furnishings either can be very short, or over an extended period of time depending on the advice of your accountant.

Our philosophy is to provide a warm, clean, comfortable environment that fosters a growing sense of self-esteem, which is so important for individuals seeking employment or struggling with getting their life back on track.

Be the difference in someone else’s life and at the same time prosper financially.  Read our free Ebook, which can be downloaded on the side bar to the right of this post.

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Max Cash Flow Now: Rental property cash flow can be thought of in different ways.

Max Cash Flow Now: Rental property cash flow can be thought of in different ways.  It’s that time if year when most of us are thinking of what we can give, what we can bring, what we can share.  Our daily blog however is mostly centered around receiving.  Receiving is, without question a good thing, but it is at the Holidays that so much of our focus shifts to giving.

Business shouldn’t be only about what we can get out of it – ideally there must be a mutual exchange of goods or services in which all parties experience value for a healthy balance to exist.  Many of our students take up our program for the sole purpose of what is it they can receive. No problem, after all business is based on smart decisions regarding how to make the most of a good investment – so naturally we applaud their thinking.

However, our program innately carries a business balance where everyone involved receives and gives within a healthy mutual respect.  In tough times or good times, offering someone a clean, affordable place to call home is foundational to the spirit of giving.  At the same time, receiving a maximum return on an investment is ultimately the purpose of good business.

Times are changing more rapidly than we would have ever conceived possible just a few short years ago – business is not “as usual”.  In this hard economic period, doesn’t it make sense to enter a business arrangement knowing that it not only benefits you, but countless others?  Think outside the box.  Remember receiving has the additional bonus of feeling even better when you are giving back in return.

Learn about our method of giving and receiving by downloading the FREE eBook on the sidebar on the right.  Happy Holidays!

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Max Cash Flow Now: Take yourself on vacation using your increased rental property income.

560328Max Cash Flow Now: Take yourself on vacation using your increased rental property income.  I was driving home in 11-degree temperatures from a meeting with one of our rental property owner/students.  He was telling me about his upcoming vacation to warm and sunny Mexico.  While some of you reading this in warmer climes I write from the Colorado Rockies where when winter hits there is no mistaking it!  The point though, is we all enjoy a vacation to break up the winter months.

Our student mentioned that he skimmed a little off his rental income every month to add to his vacation fund.  “Before I worked with your program my gross rents were barely getting the expenses paid; now it does that twice over and leaves me a little play money.”

Not everyone would take this approach with the additional income they generate from their rental properties.  I understand.  Some would even think it bad business not to put the entire added profits back into their investment, but then again . . . live once and enjoy it!

There is so much room in the deal after transforming your rental property with our unique approach that considering taking a little every month and padding your vacation fund may not be such an imprudent idea.  How many rentals do you have right now that would help pay your way to Mexico this winter?

Learn how he increased his cash flow 3 to 4 times.  Download FREE eBook on sidebar.

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Max Cash Flow Now: You’ve quadrupled your rental property income, now what?

Max Cash Flow Now: You’ve quadrupled your rental property income, now what?  Every business needs an exit strategy and you have three unique options, IF you’ve used our system to maximize rental income. (FREE eBook, see sidebar)

The first requires you to hold the property for at least a year to establish a believable income stream.  That’s right, I say believable because most people won’t believe the money your rental property will make for you.  You won’t be selling a normal rental unit that is rented out for market rates, you’ll be selling a system, one that generates 3 to 4 times the cash flow (net rental income) than any other home in the neighborhood.  The new buyer will pay a premium over the normal appraised value or comparable home values in the area, to acquire such a money machine.

The second exit strategy is for those who use our system and have multiple homes or dwellings.  That is selling the group of homes as a business.  Not just a real estate portfolio, but an actual business with forms, systems, and profitable track record, consequently selling the “business” for much more than the underlying real estate.iStock_000002186817XSmall

The third scenario is – a shorter version of option number one, – once you’ve acquired the property, rehabbed it, and once your property is occupied, sell to another investor that would like to carry on the same system, earning substantially more per month than a typical rental.

Again, learn how to do it at downloading our FREE eBook on the side bar to the right.

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Max Cash Flow Now: Following up on yesterday’s blog on new way to increase rental property income;

Alf & Jeannie Gizzo

Max Cash Flow Now: Following up on yesterday’s blog on new way to increase rental property income; I was contacted by a real estate investor that purchased one of these Government Direct Foreclosures to inquire how he could create even more cash flow than what he was getting now, at market rents.

He purchased the property, a 1248 sq. ft 3 bedrooms 2 bath bi-level in Aurora CO, for $129,500 with only $3,885 down, on the Government Direct Foreclosure program, the house only needed another $5,000 in fix up.  Closing costs were worked into a 4.5 fixed rate loan with a 4.75% APR.  Cash out of pocket was $8,885 after rehab.  His PITI was only $873 and he was renting the property out for $1,250 per month.  That results in monthly cash flow of $377 per month, or $4,524 annually.  Hence, an annualized cash on cash return of 61% for the first year.  You don’t get that in your 401K very often!

But what if he added our model to it?  With the increased rents our model generates, the same property would rent for $2,128 monthly.  Deducting the PITI and in our model he’ll pay a portion of the utilities, you have $1,005 cash flow or a $12,060 per year, a 74% cash on cash return the first year, and a 90% overall cash on cash return.  Wow!

Download our FREE eBook by entering your email address and learn our side of the equation.

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