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5 Helpful Tips for Selling Your Home
Below are 5 helpful tips for selling your home. If you visit our website listed in the resource box at the end of this article you will receive 55 helpful tips for selling your home, for Free! Tip #1 Shed A Little Light on the Subject Two...

Essential Buyer’s Guide For Overseas Real Estate
It’s been said many a time that overseas real estate buyers leave their brain on the plane when they step out into the sun in their overseas destination of choice. They’ve already fallen in love with the country, its people, climate and lifestyle...

Home Owners In Trouble! Real Estate Bubble, Rising Interest, Variable Rate Loans Concern Fed.
Hurricane Katrina, floods, earthquakes, high fuel prices, shrinking pocketbooks, and now, worries over variable interest rate loans are discussions heard throughout the nation. With mounting concerns by the Fed over rising inflation, there is a...

Real Estate Investing First Deal Jitters
It’s very normal to get first deal jitters in real estate investing. There are several real issues: 1. Real estate is a big investment, the dollars are large, so there is great risk but also great rewards. Its much different signing a...

The Mind Of The Real Estate Investor
Myself and many others are living proof that by changing your mental and physical habits, you can build your wealth. This mini-course focuses on changing or fine-tuning your mental habits and attitudes toward real estate investment so that you can...

 
Real Estate Investing: Beware Of "Subject To" Promises

Another real estate writer's mini course, full of promises and fluff, ended with a "lesson" on why you need to buy his book so you can finance multiple properties "subject to." The reason, he said, "because banks won't let you finance more than ten mortgages."

This simply isn't true.

First, banks let you finance as many mortgages as you can pay for. Some banks limit the number of loans made to one person. Experienced real estate investors just move on to another lending institution.

I know one investor who owns more than one hundred single family homes. All have mortgages. He constantly refinances one rental for the down payment to buy the next. Besides living off the cash flow from his rentals, he also refinances a rental occasionally to take his family on a first-class vacation.

Another investor, my friend who owns the carpet company we use for our fixers, owns more than fifty rentals. None were purchased "subject to" the existing loan. Many were purchased "all cash" for quick closings, with mortgages added later.

For beginning real estate investors, looking for an owner willing to sell their property "subject to" the


existing loan adds a frustrating component to the search for a profitable property. Today's savvy home sellers just won't sell to a buyer who can't cash them out.

Of course, some investors offer "subject to" and lease-option purchases. But, properties with most of the equity stripped out come with payments too high for rental income to support. These properties make better candidates for owner-occupant home buyers with poor credit who don't mind paying more for a house.

Beware of "subject to" seminars, books, and promotions. This real estate investing method worked last century.

Copyright © 2005 Jeanette J. Fisher. All Rights Reserved.


About the Author: Jeanette Fisher teaches real estate investing and credit college courses. Jeanette is the author of "Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars" and other books. For a free report, "Design Psychology for Selling Houses," visit http://doghousetodollhouse.com

Source: www.isnare.com