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Rental Property - Refinance, Don't Sell
You own a rental property for years, and never see the "big pay-off." Is it time to cash in on your investment, now that you've paid down the mortgage, and values are up? Maybe not.
The Problem With Selling
Selling means you'll have to pay a large capital gains tax. This can be avoided if you reinvest through a 1031 exchange, but then the point is that you want your money, right? Also, a good rental gets more income as rents go up. Do you want to lose this inflation-indexed retirement plan? What's the alternative?
Refinancing Rental Property
Have you considered that if you refinance, you can get much of your gain out of the property, without paying a penny in taxes? Borrowing money is not a taxable event. You can take it and spend it however you want, and still keep your rentals.
Let's look at an example. Suppose you have owned a small apartment building for years. You bought it for $240,000, with a downpayment of $40,000, and mortgage payments of $1650 monthly on the balance. Now it is worth $400,000, you only owe $120,000, and your cash flow is around $800/month. How do you get at that equity?
A bank will probably loan you 70% of the value, or $280,000. After paying off the first mortgage, you are left with $160,000. With todays lower interest rates, your payment on the new mortgage will be about the same. At most you might lose $50/month in cash flow.
An even better scenario: Use $40,000 for high-return upgrades to the property, such as carports or laundry rooms, and then raise the rents. You could have $120,000 left over to spend any way you want, AND have higher cash flow. Does that sound better than selling your retirement plan? Don't sell. Refinance that rental property!
About the Author
Steve Gillman has invested real estate for years. To learn more, and to see a photo of a beautiful house he and his wife bought for $17,500, visit http://www.HousesUnderFiftyThousand.com
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FORECLOSURE: for 22 months, Nevadans have faced worst of national crisis (Reno Gazette-Journal) Shelly Griese hates to move. Credit card companies quick to raise rates, fees (Atlanta Journal-Constitution) Greg Fischer was already fed up with Bank of America for doubling his credit card's interest rate to 28.99 percent — the price for being a couple of weeks late with a payment in April. What sent him over the top, he said, was the bank's decision to rule his September payment late, too. He paid on the due date on the bank's Web site. But he paid at 4:10 p.m. — past a 3:30 cutoff that Fischer said ... Don't cling to a home you can't afford (Erie Times-News) Dear Edith: When I was divorced, the house was deeded to me. My husband wanted me to sign off on a deed in lieu of foreclosure but I refused. I was given two years to either refinance or assume the current mortgage. Otherwise I must deed the house back to the bank. Real Estate Live (Washington Post) Welcome to Real Estate Live, an online discussion of the Washington area housing market with Post Real Estate editor Maryann Haggerty and columnist Elizabeth Razzi. Enterprise Inns to get tough on tie-breakers (Publican) Enterprise Inns’ chief executive Ted Tuppen today pledged his company’s support for what he called “deserving licensees”, but warned those who breached the terms of their lease to expect tough treatment.
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