This article defines Real Estate Investing as the purchase, ownership, management, rental, or sale of property for profit. Core investment types: (1) rental properties (residential or commercial – generating monthly cash flow), (2) real estate investment trusts (REITs) (publicly traded shares in property portfolios), (3) fix-and-flip (buy, renovate, sell quickly for profit), (4) raw land (speculative appreciation). The article addresses: objectives of real estate investing; key concepts including cash flow, cap rate, leverage, and equity; core mechanisms such as mortgage financing, property management, and 1031 exchanges; international comparisons and debated issues (liquidity, maintenance costs, tax treatment); summary and emerging trends (crowdfunding, short-term rentals, industrial real estate); and a Q&A section.
This article describes real estate investing without endorsing specific properties or strategies. Objectives commonly cited: generating passive income, building equity through mortgage paydown, tax advantages (depreciation, 1031 exchange), and portfolio diversification.
Key terminology:
Typical rental property expenses (% of rent):
Rental property analysis (1% rule): Monthly rent should be at least 1% of purchase price for positive cash flow (e.g., 150,000property→150,000property→1,500 rent). Not always achievable in high-cost markets.
REIT types:
Fix-and-flip profitability:
Rental property taxation (US vs other countries):
Debated issues:
Summary: Rental properties provide cash flow and equity growth but require active management. REITs offer liquidity and diversification with lower returns. Fix-and-flip is speculative, requires renovation expertise. Leverage amplifies returns and risks.
Emerging trends:
Q1: How much down payment is needed for a rental property?
A: Conventional loans typically require 15-25% down (investment property). FHA loans unavailable for non-owner-occupied. Primary residence conversion to rental after 1 year may allow lower down payment.
Q2: What is a good cap rate?
A: 6-10% generally considered good, varying by property type and location. Higher cap rates correlate with higher risk (C-class neighbourhoods, older buildings). Lower cap rates (3-5%) in prime locations with appreciation potential.
Q3: Are REITs good for retirement accounts?
A: Yes. REIT dividends often taxed as ordinary income (not qualified dividends). Holding in IRA or 401(k) avoids current tax. Roth IRA allows tax-free growth and withdrawals.
https://www.irs.gov/1031-exchanges
https://www.reit.com/
https://www.biggerpockets.com/