My biggest fear about renting a home in one of these big cities would be squatters. Once you get a squatter in there they've got all the rights.
How long before the government just takes over the rental business in California? It doesn't make sense to be a landlord in California or any of these far left states.
He discusses several things I didn’t know were things.
Take this video with a grain of salt. As said before his house is located in the worst possible city. He bought on emotion not sound business sense.
I started buying rentals here in Ca in the late 80s. We started with a separated pair of houses. Figured if one was empty the other still paid the mortgage. We learned quickly how the eviction process works when one of our first tenants needed to be evicted. They paid first and last and never paid again. They even bragged to our other tenants that this is what they do and drag out the process because they knew the system. It took us 3 months to get them out. They did leave one of their cars on the property and at 12:01am on the day after the deadline I towed the car. We learned how to do a lien sale and got a substantial amount of money owed back. We own 6 rentals and in 35 yrs have done 3 evictions. None in the last 25 yrs. With all 3 I’ve gotten a vehicle from them that paid some of the costs. I tow them to my secure storage lot and by the time they try to get them back the legal storage fees start to add up. It usually takes 45 days for an eviction if everything goes well. We do everything ourselves except we need a 3rd party to process server them. They allways seem to wait untill the last possible minute to leave. My city doesn’t have rent control but we have to pay a bullshit fee and have to keep the exterior at a higher standard compared to a owner occupied house. Of course this fee is ultimately paid by the renters. We also have a small 37 unit RV storage lot at my play shop and in 25 yrs we’ve only had 1 stop paying fees. Turns out they weren’t paying the bank also and we got a substantial Finders Fee for turning them in for repo.
Bottom line being a landlord anywhere is not as easy as people think. You do lose rights to the tenants. We’ve had our share of trashed houses to repair. You don’t just get to put the rent money in your pocket. I’m in the process of putting on a new roof on one of my rentals and that will eat up 6 months of rent. The saving grace for us is I do the majority of maintenance and the wife does all the administrative work. It’s a long term game lots of ups and downs. But we’ve got 6 paid off properties out of it and it allowed me to retire at 56.
I read through the lines in the dudes video he's created some click bait to promote a credit card.Take this video with a grain of salt. As said before his house is located in the worst possible city. He bought on emotion not sound business sense.
I started buying rentals here in Ca in the late 80s. We started with a separated pair of houses. Figured if one was empty the other still paid the mortgage. We learned quickly how the eviction process works when one of our first tenants needed to be evicted. They paid first and last and never paid again. They even bragged to our other tenants that this is what they do and drag out the process because they knew the system. It took us 3 months to get them out. They did leave one of their cars on the property and at 12:01am on the day after the deadline I towed the car. We learned how to do a lien sale and got a substantial amount of money owed back. We own 6 rentals and in 35 yrs have done 3 evictions. None in the last 25 yrs. With all 3 I’ve gotten a vehicle from them that paid some of the costs. I tow them to my secure storage lot and by the time they try to get them back the legal storage fees start to add up. It usually takes 45 days for an eviction if everything goes well. We do everything ourselves except we need a 3rd party to process server them. They allways seem to wait untill the last possible minute to leave. My city doesn’t have rent control but we have to pay a bullshit fee and have to keep the exterior at a higher standard compared to a owner occupied house. Of course this fee is ultimately paid by the renters. We also have a small 37 unit RV storage lot at my play shop and in 25 yrs we’ve only had 1 stop paying fees. Turns out they weren’t paying the bank also and we got a substantial Finders Fee for turning them in for repo.
Bottom line being a landlord anywhere is not as easy as people think. You do lose rights to the tenants. We’ve had our share of trashed houses to repair. You don’t just get to put the rent money in your pocket. I’m in the process of putting on a new roof on one of my rentals and that will eat up 6 months of rent. The saving grace for us is I do the majority of maintenance and the wife does all the administrative work. It’s a long term game lots of ups and downs. But we’ve got 6 paid off properties out of it and it allowed me to retire at 56.
I'm ignorant to this whole thing, but how do squatters get involved?
That is EXACTLY the approach we take as well. Rent a bit below market rate, don't raise the rent unnecessarily, take care of the property, encourage long term tenants.Never had a squatter issue. All my rentals are with in 2 miles of my home and I keep a close watch on them. I don’t put up with any shit. The first eviction took 90 days the other 2 took 45. My wife handles the tenants if I’m involved it’s No Bueno for them. We’ve learned how to judge people. We make sure they have good jobs that they won’t want to leave if we have to garnish their wages. All our current tenants have been with us for yrs. We had one who moved out and my Wife commented that he paid for the total cost of the house in the time he was there. We keep our rentals in first class shape as if we lived in them, our rents are just below market rate and we don’t raise the rents unless our costs go up so people tend to stay unless they have life changes.
Take this video with a grain of salt. As said before his house is located in the worst possible city. He bought on emotion not sound business sense.
I started buying rentals here in Ca in the late 80s. We started with a separated pair of houses. Figured if one was empty the other still paid the mortgage. We learned quickly how the eviction process works when one of our first tenants needed to be evicted. They paid first and last and never paid again. They even bragged to our other tenants that this is what they do and drag out the process because they knew the system. It took us 3 months to get them out. They did leave one of their cars on the property and at 12:01am on the day after the deadline I towed the car. We learned how to do a lien sale and got a substantial amount of money owed back. We own 6 rentals and in 35 yrs have done 3 evictions. None in the last 25 yrs. With all 3 I’ve gotten a vehicle from them that paid some of the costs. I tow them to my secure storage lot and by the time they try to get them back the legal storage fees start to add up. It usually takes 45 days for an eviction if everything goes well. We do everything ourselves except we need a 3rd party to process server them. They allways seem to wait untill the last possible minute to leave. My city doesn’t have rent control but we have to pay a bullshit fee and have to keep the exterior at a higher standard compared to a owner occupied house. Of course this fee is ultimately paid by the renters. We also have a small 37 unit RV storage lot at my play shop and in 25 yrs we’ve only had 1 stop paying fees. Turns out they weren’t paying the bank also and we got a substantial Finders Fee for turning them in for repo.
Bottom line being a landlord anywhere is not as easy as people think. You do lose rights to the tenants. We’ve had our share of trashed houses to repair. You don’t just get to put the rent money in your pocket. I’m in the process of putting on a new roof on one of my rentals and that will eat up 6 months of rent. The saving grace for us is I do the majority of maintenance and the wife does all the administrative work. It’s a long term game lots of ups and downs. But we’ve got 6 paid off properties out of it and it allowed me to retire at 56.
Yep, although ours only charges us 1/2 a month's rent. Been using her for years....but since I started using an agent for showings and lease ups I've had good tenants. Costs me a months rent up front but better in the long run, and I don't have the ability to do credit checks.
Yep, although ours only charges us 1/2 a month's rent. Been using her for years.
