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Edited on Tue Sep-20-05 02:29 PM by Xithras
The second home I flipped was a great example of what you need in order to pull it off. It was a one-owner 1940's ranch that had been sadly neglected by its elderly owners. It sat on an awesome .3 acre lot with big yards, but they hadn't been kept up in a decade, and the entire house was hidden behind overgrown bushes. When I walked inside, the finish was worn completely off the hardwood, the original cabinets were falling apart, it smelled funny (cat pee in the 40 year old bedroom carpets), and it was cave like because of the bushes blocking the windows. Oh, and the roof was about to cave in.
The house was dark, dreary, and depressing, which is why it was offered for $175k in a neighborhood that comped at $250k. I had an inspector out there when I looked over the home for the first time, and made the seller a flat offer of $150k. I was suprised, at first, when they accepted it at $155k...until I learned that the owner had only paid $15k for it when it was built, and the money was all profit for them (it had been paid off for decades).
I sterilized the house, redid the floors myself, replaced the kitchen and bath cabinets myself, replaced all of the outlets, light switches, and fixtures myself, painted the house myself, and rebuilt the collapsed fences myself. I paid professionals to replace the roof, landscape the entire property, replace the hot water heater and rebuild the HVAC unit, and recoat the bathtubs to make them look better.
Original sale price: $155,000 Money invested for repairs, mortgage overhead, construction loan fees and interest, and real estate agent fees: $47,000 Final Sale Price: $271,000 Profit: $69,000
You CAN do it, but I have to point out how much work I put into the house myself. That flip chewed up ALL of my weekends for four months straight. If I'd contracted out, I'd have finished the house faster, but would have only made a small portion of the profit. If they hadn't accepted the lower offer, I'd have lost money.
The biggest problem with flipping is really finding that "deal". If you jump into a house that isn't a deal compared to the comps, you'll NEVER make money at it.
On edit: I forgot to mention, I also put all new appliances and Corian counters in the kitchen. A good kitchen will sell a house on its own, so it's NOT the place to go cheap when doing your updates.
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