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Informative Articles

Becoming A Battle Hardened Real Estate Veteran Without All The Scars:
As part of a new web site that we just launched, www.GetPreconstructionDeals.com, I get repeated requests asking if a particular deal is good or not. While we can't answer this for individual projects, we can certainly look at what HAS to get done...

EFFICACY AND PROFITABILITY IN COMMERCIAL AVIATION
----------------By Box------------------By: Capt.Savas Uskent ATP/CFI Boeings 737/800, B737/400-500, Airbus310/300-200,BAe146/100-70, Challenger 601-3A, LR-60, LR-55, LR-35, Caravelle SE210 http://www.geocities.com/uskent/index.html...

Tips On How Your Bookkeeper Can Reduce Your Taxes By Hundreds Of Dollars
Standard monthly expenses for your Business are transferred from you to your Tax Professional to be put on your Schedule C. No problem, most people get this part right. It's the thousands of dollars in miscellaneous receipts that many people...

Worse Than Tsunami, Trade Protectionism Hurts Third World Citizens
Last Thursday, I was heartened to read the news that my church, Southeast Christian Church in Louisville, KY, had collected $732,000 from its members (beyond its weekly giving) for tsunami relief in Southeast Asia. That partially offset the news...

Your Guide To Retirement Planning
In life, nothing is permanent in this world. Everything that comes will definitely go. That is why it is best to put our best foot forward and save more for the future. The best thing that you have to start with is to have a retirement plan. Some...

 
Mobile Home Rentals - A Great Investment

Why mobile home rentals? Get past the prejudice and look at the numbers. In our town, for example, a two bedroom house costs $130,000 and rents for $800/month. A $50,000 mobile home on real estate gets $500/month. Cash-on-cash return on investment is obviously higher with mobile homes.
Don't let the half-truth that mobiles depreciate in value keep you from investing in them. They lose value in a park, on a rented lot, but not on real estate. My first home was a mobile, bought for $19,000 and sold for $45,000 fourteen years later.
House rentals here usually have negative cash flow, while mobile home rentals have some cash flow. Still, investors prefer houses, believing they'll build equity faster, but is that true? Only during times of fast appreciation.
Equity Building With Mobile Home Rentals
Buy a house for $120,00 with $20,000 down, and take out a $100,000, 6%, 30-year mortgage. You'll have a payment of $599.60. Of the first payment, $500 will go to interest, and $99.60 to principal. You only built equity of $99.60. This ignores appreciation, but only for the moment.
Second scenario: Find a mobile home for sale on land, and borrow $30,000, at 8%, amortised over 10 years. Higher interest and a shorter term is normal with mobiles, but being done with payments in 10 years instead of 30 sn't all bad. The payment will be $363.99. The first month, $200 will go to interest, and $163.99 to principal. You built more equity in this scenario.
Mobile home rentals on land might appreciate more slowly than the "regular" house, but faster loan pay-down usually covers this factor. Pay less per month, have positive instead of negative cash flow, and build more equity! Don't expect your real estate agent to tell you this.
Mobile Homes - Cash Flow
In the example, you'd lose about $150/month on the house, after the payment, taxes, insurance, repairs and other expenses. You'd have cash flow with the mobile home, and after ten years (when the loan is paid off), you'd have a lot of cash flow. Mobiles are cheap to maintain. The furnace died in rental I owned, and I replaced it for $1,200, much less than a furnace for a larger home. For $200 you can have the roof tarred, instead of $5,000 to re-shingle a traditional roof. Windows, plumbing, doors - they're all cheaper. Property taxes and insurance are less too (be sure you can get insurance, since some old mobiles may be uninsurable).
The Bottom Line
$20,000 can buy two mobiles, with $10,000 down on each, or four with $5,000 down on each, instead of one negative-cash-flow house. The two investors in our town that own most of the mobile homes always have cash flow, and have built millions in equity. Others, following their prejudices, struggle to make money with their "nice" rental homes. So when you're looking for a good investment, don't forget those mobile home rentals.

About the Author
Steve Gillman has invested in real estate for years. See a photo of a beautiful house he and his wife bought for $17,500 on his home page, or go straight to the section on Investing In Real Estate: http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com

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