^ thank you.
"All profit" is a misnomar. Look at your amortization schedule in your loan docs. I don't care what percent you're paying, you're still continuously paying (I.E. increasing the cost) interest and a ton more. You're hopes to recoup the principal but you wont even be making a dent in recouping the total outlay.
For instance 240k @ 4.4 over 30 yrs would tack on $197k. Your total outlay is now 437k. Youd have to sell over that threshold for "all profit" so to speak and that's without including prop taxes.
That's where rent versus buy decisions come in plus other intangibles.
My friend who does this is in and out within 3-mo's (or whenever the FHA restriction is lifted). He's got his real estate license so makes money on the front and back ends. Now he has an investor so overhead is decreasing and if it sits longer than he'd like the meter isn't running on a mortgage too.
"All profit" is a misnomar. Look at your amortization schedule in your loan docs. I don't care what percent you're paying, you're still continuously paying (I.E. increasing the cost) interest and a ton more. You're hopes to recoup the principal but you wont even be making a dent in recouping the total outlay.
For instance 240k @ 4.4 over 30 yrs would tack on $197k. Your total outlay is now 437k. Youd have to sell over that threshold for "all profit" so to speak and that's without including prop taxes.
That's where rent versus buy decisions come in plus other intangibles.
My friend who does this is in and out within 3-mo's (or whenever the FHA restriction is lifted). He's got his real estate license so makes money on the front and back ends. Now he has an investor so overhead is decreasing and if it sits longer than he'd like the meter isn't running on a mortgage too.