Over the past 16 years, I’ve worked with nearly 200 first-time investors. From my experience, until they go through our training, most are completely focused on ROI and cash flow.
Here are some key points new investors must keep in mind:
1. You Are Not Buying Real Estate
Yes, the result will be purchasing a property, but that is not what you are buying. You are buying an income stream. You are buying a method of permanently getting off the daily work treadmill and living on your terms. So what matters is not the property itself; it is the income the property produces.
The net rental income is called cash flow. The formula is:
- Cash flow = Income – expenses
To make money, your income must be greater than your expenses. I will focus on income (or rent) here.
2. Probable, Not Gross, Income Is What Matters
Many people calculate annual income as 12 times the monthly rent. If a performing tenant always occupied the property, this would be true.
However, reality is far different. A more realistic view of annual income is:
- Annual income = 12 x monthly rent – vacancy cost – expenses
I will ignore expenses and only focus on vacancy costs.
There is no way to know precisely your future vacancy costs. However, you can estimate the average future vacancy costs based on the tenant segment your property attracts and their historical behaviors. You can obtain such historical information by interviewing property managers.
I will use my tenant segment research in Las Vegas to show you how to estimate vacancy costs.
Las Vegas has three primary tenant segments: transient, permanent, and transitional. Each segment is named based on the average length of stay. This table shows the average stay, average rent, and additional information I will use to estimate the average annual vacancy cost for each of the three segments.
Transient | Permanent | Transitional | |
Average length of stay | <1 year | >5 years | 1 year |
Average monthly rent | $900 | $2,200 | $3,000 |
Time to re-rent the property | 2 months | 1 month | 3 months |
Typical cost to prepare the property for re-renting | $2,400 | $500 | $3,000 |
Although the actual cost calculation for a property is more complex due to property-specific carrying costs, this example will help illustrate the concept. For simplicity, I assume the monthly recurring cost (debt service, taxes, insurance, utilities, etc.) for properties across all three segments is $2,500/month.
The formula for vacancy cost is:
- Vacancy cost = Months to rent x carrying costs + renovation cost
Calculating the per-vacancy cost for the three segments:
- Transient: 2 x $2,500 + $2,400 = $7,400
- Permanent: 1 x $2500 + $500 = $3,000
- Transitional: 3 x $2,500 + $3,000 = $10,500
To convert the per-vacancy cost into an annual vacancy cost, divide the per-vacancy cost by the average length of stay for each segment.
- Annual average transient vacancy cost: $7,400 / 1 Year = $7,400 per Year
- Annual average permanent vacancy cost: $3,000/ 5 Years = $600 per Year
- Annual average transitional vacancy cost: $10,500 / 1 Year = $10,500 per Year
Considering the cost of vacancy for each segment, we can now calculate the potential annual income for each of the three segments.
- Transient probable income: $900 x 12 – $7,400 = $3,400 per Year
- Permanent probable income: $2,200 x 12 – $600 = $25,800 per Year
- Transitional probable income: $3,000 x 12 – $10,500 = $25,500 per Year
Based on these calculations, you can modify your cash flow calculations to use probable income, and not gross income, as follows:
- Transient cash flow = Gross income x $3,400/($900 x 12) – expenses or gross income x 31% – expenses
- Permanent cash flow = Gross income x $25,800/($2,200 x 12) – expenses or gross income x 98% – expenses
- Transitional cash flow = Gross income x 25,500/($3,000 x 12) – expenses or gross income x 71% – expenses
Even though a property might look like a cash cow based on gross rent, it could be a money pit when vacancy cost is included.
It’s important to note that vacancy cost is a function of carrying cost, time to rent, and turn cost. These factors depend on the property and tenant segment it attracts. Contrary to popular belief, there is no relationship between vacancy cost and the rent amount.
3. Learn the Limitations of ROI and Cash Flow
ROI and cash flow only estimate how a property will likely perform on day one under ideal conditions. They tell you nothing about day two onward. Because you will hold the property for many years, what happens after day one is far more important than day one.
For example, suppose you are choosing between two properties in different cities.
Property A:
- Price: $300,000
- Rent: $2,000 per Month
- Rent growth rate: 2% a Year
Property B:
- Price: $300,000
- Rent: $1,500 per Month
- Rent growth rate: 8% a Year
Based on this data, it is a no-brainer that Property A is the better investment, right?
Now, let’s look beyond first-day performance. I will assume inflation is 4% per year. What will be the inflation-adjusted rent (or buying power) for both properties over the first 10 years?
Property A (Inflation-Adjusted Rent) | Property B (Inflation-Adjusted Rent) | |
Purchase Year | $2,000 | $1,500 |
1 | $1,962 | $1,558 |
2 | $1,924 | $1,618 |
3 | $1,887 | $1,680 |
4 | $1,851 | $1,744 |
5 | $1,815 | $1,812 |
6 | $1,780 | $1,881 |
7 | $1,746 | $1,954 |
8 | $1,712 | $2,029 |
9 | $1,679 | $2,107 |
10 | $1,647 | $2,188 |
Because rents where Property A is located are not increasing as fast as inflation, inflation-adjusted income declines every year. In comparison, because Property B’s rents are increasing faster than inflation, the inflation-adjusted income rises every year.
By year 5, both properties have almost the same inflation-adjusted income. After year 5, Property B is the better long-term investment. Buying Property A would be a financial disaster if you plan on holding the property for over 5 years.
The lesson is that property evaluation based solely on day-one metrics such as cash flow and ROI can lead to bad decisions and losses in the long run.
4. “You Can Only Count on Today”—or Can You?
The most frequent justification I hear for making property selections based on day-one cash flow and ROI is, “You can only count on today.” However, this belief assumes that the world is static and nothing will change. Change is the only constant in life, so this is invalid.
For example, if you purchase property in a city where rents have not kept pace with inflation, achieving financial freedom with these properties is impossible. This is because the amount of goods and services your rent can buy decreases every day due to inflation. This is shown in the example of Property A and Property B.
The best analogy I know for rent growth and inflation is an escalator. Imagine watching someone attempting to walk up a descending escalator. The person walking up represents rent growth, and the downward-moving escalator represents inflation. If the person doesn’t walk up fast enough to outpace the escalator’s descent, they will move downward.
So even if rents increase and inflation decreases faster, your buying power, or the actual value of your money, will decline.
Final Thoughts
I’ve outlined important tips every real estate investor needs to consider. These are not just suggestions but integral parts of successful real estate investing. Ignoring or failing to consider them can have serious negative long-term financial consequences.
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Note By BiggerPockets: These are opinions written by the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of BiggerPockets.