• CodeInvasion@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    Everyone here loves to complain about landlords without realizing that the majority of single family home landlords (not corporate landlords) are barely making it by too.

    Banks are really the ones making criminal amounts of money. 1/3 of rent is typically interest payments. 1/3 of rent then goes to taxes.

    For instance, I make $2,900/mo. from rent, but pay $2,800/mo. for the mortgage. I’ve spent over $8k this year alone on repairs and maintenance. But please continue to complain how landlords are constantly raking in cash. It’s typical for a homeowner to pay 1% of the cost of the property per year to maintain it. I will never see a positive cash flow until the mortgage is paid off in 25 years. The only benefit I get by continuing to own the property is the appreciation in equity and principle payments to the mortgage. At the end of the year we will have a -$7k cash flow and $5k equity appreciation. In a HCOL area, that $5k on paper is less than 3% of the area’s median yearly salary.

    I feel for anyone out there who has a landlord that didn’t consider the hidden costs and the fact they should expect to runa negative cash flow, because it’s those landlords that also can’t afford to fix the house you might be renting.

    • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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      6 months ago

      Dude, someone else is paying your mortgage for you. You know what your tenant get for paying your mortgage? Jackshit.

      You are complaining that the home that you rent cost you 7k a year instead of 35k a year. Cry me a river.

      • CodeInvasion@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        Oh yes, it costs me $7k a year for the pleasure of managing a property, responding to all the tenants needs, the risk of paying for major future repairs, trusting the tenant to pay on time and in full (collections is practically impossible to enforce), dealing with vacancies while I still pay the mortgage, paying real estate agent fees which amounts to a month’s rent every time I get a new tenant. And that’s all for a house that I am not able to live in, and that I have locked up 20% of the house’s value for a down payment. It’s much more profitable just to let that money sit in the stock market instead.

        But please tell me more about how you know better and that’s it’s all sunshine and rainbows for a non-corporate landlord.

        • itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          6 months ago

          So why don’t you? What motivates you to not take that money to the stock market or start a business, if it’s oh so hard being a landlord?

          • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Myself, I don’t. Being a landlord has quite a bit of risk from awful tenants as well as quite a bit of effort to make it work well. I have a job, don’t want another, and don’t want the additional risk; my investments are thus elsewhere.

      • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        You know what your tenant get for paying your mortgage? Jackshit.

        If you are truly getting nothing by renting, buy a home instead. If you respond by saying ‘but I don’t want to, or can’t because of x’, that is what you are paying for as a renter.

        • Seleni@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Tell that to the banks that refuse to let people have loans, even if they’ve been paying more for rent than the mortgage is for years.

          • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            You have abysmal credit from not paying your bills and can’t get a loan? That is certainly a benefit of renting, don’t need a loan.