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Finding an Investment Property: A basic guide

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Affinity Properties, Inc 509937

Real estate investing is one of the most exciting investments you can make. Whether you are investing in a property to rent out or want to improve its interior and then flip it, there are a few basic guidelines you should know. Unfortunately, television shows and other media have made it seem like real estate investing is something that is easy and hassle free. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Here are the basic keys to finding the right investment property and making a wise choice with your money.

Before you start looking, you need to keep in mind that all investing is speculation. No matter whether you are investing in small stocks or a million dollar property, the nature of investment is speculation. You are hoping that your profitability of the investment will increase over time. The goal in your investment property is to minimize the risk and maximize your profit, but there is always some risk involved.

With this in mind, you need to have a clear guide for your investment property. What are you going to do with it? Use it as a rental? Flip it for a profit? Move into it eventually? Don’t just jump on a deal without knowing exactly where it is going. You need to have a plan in mind in order to correctly evaluate the intrinsic value of a property.

The intrinsic value is an estimate of the property’s true worth. It’s the amount the property should be worth and not what it is being sold for. In an investment situation, the property in mind should be worth more than you are paying for it. The amount of difference between the worth of the property and the price will help you determine if it’s a good deal or not. This will change based on what you are planning on doing with the property. If you are flipping it and you need a substantial amount of repair work done, there will need to be a bigger gap between these prices than if you are planning on living in it yourself.

Without this gap between intrinsic value and sale price, you won’t have an investment. This gap will provide you with your profit. It will create equity that you can use later on to invest in other properties, or it will provide you with a profit margin for a home flip.

You can increase the equity by making repairs, but you will have to see this as part of your investment price. You can figure out whether a purchase will be a good deal by estimating the cost of repairs. You can expect the equity in a home to double by the amount of repairs you put into the home. If the sales price of the home plus the equity you build through repairs is comparable to other listings in the neighborhood, you may have a good investment on your hands.

Both residential and commercial properties should be viewed through this lens. Always decide first what you will do with the property. Then decide how much wiggle room you can afford in your purchase. Next, take into consideration the cost of repairs and the equity you’ll build. It’s only once you take these factors into consideration that you can make a good decision.

Joe Cline writes articles for Austin Texas real estate. Other articles written by the author related to Realtors Property Resource and Austin real estate can be found on the net.

Comments (2)

Wallace S. Gibson, CPM
Gibson Management Group, Ltd. - Charlottesville, VA
LandlordWhisperer

You should be posting your GREAT posts on the AR channels, and at least 5 groups * investing, property management, landlord issues

Feb 18, 2010 09:02 PM
Anonymous
JOe Cline

Hi Wallace,

Thanks for the tip. How do I post to channels? Is it a seperate place or a bunch of those check boxes when I submit?

Thanks!

Joe

Feb 23, 2010 04:37 AM
#4