this post was submitted on 02 Oct 2023
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[–] [email protected] 56 points 1 year ago (40 children)

I've calculated if it would pay off to build a house with four units on a piece of land that I already have. It would barely pay for itself after 30 years but let's be honest, 30 years is when the first big renovations are in order. I'm not sure if the "landlords are rich leeches" - trope holds up outside expensive cities with inherited properties.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Being a landlord isn't a way for someone who doesn't have wealth to acquire it. It's a way to park your existing wealth in quickly appreciating assets preferably purchased from other losers when they lose their asses and collect monthly rent too.

If on day one you have 700k and you purchase an existing property and in 30 days after you rent it out your property is still worth 700k and you are now ahead of the game in 30 days not 30 years.

If you purchased at a reasonable time a year later its worth 750 and you've collected 84k 1% of property value per month.

Most owners are in the top 10% to start with.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

quickly appreciating assets preferably purchased from other losers when they lose their asses and collect monthly rent too.

I wouldn't say quickly appreciating, though. It's a fairly slow growth rate for someone with that kind of money. They diversify into real estate because it creates some tax protections (your costs) and it's fairly stable. Like buying into a terrible small business, but one that magically won't fail. The things that could cause total loss to real estate are usually handled in standard insurance, unlike a business that can just tank.

The thing is, as you and the other person said, it's all about the big companies who own tons of real estate AND the big companies that manage rental properties.

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