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by ianai 1601 days ago
Most or all of these type of landlords that I’ve spoken to strongly disliked to actively hated being a landlord. It’s very counter the “get wealthy slowly” narrative of being a landlord. Of course the financial aspects are true though they don’t mention them. This is in a location where good renters are a dime a dozen and building new units is pretty much impossible.
3 comments

Being a halfway decent landlord is a miserable pain in the ass unless you live or work very close to your rental property. And even then, it's pretty easy to see several months income go up in smoke with even a modest renovation or repair.

The income is nice, but it's anything but "passive" unless your rents are so high that you can afford to pay a management company, and/or you are comfortable being a slumlord.

Yes and I’ve heard mostly complaints about management companies. All the classic principal/agent problems with the costs of bringing more people into the situation.

Edit-added “more people”

Well yes, they all complain about being a landlord. However as you say, they never discuss the money side of things--just the hassle. Most landlords in a very bad year will break even, but in an average year will be in the positive. And of course you shouldn't even be looking at rental income in the short term--you should be looking at it as an asset that someone else pays for entirely and maybe slops a little extra cash to you in the short term and THEN when you're older and they've paid for your asset as a revenue generator. I've been looking at buying a rental even though the prices are insane right now simply as a source of reoccurring revenue when my wife and I are older and the loan has been paid off.
I've done the same (bought a house, kept the old one for rental) and used an agency as a middle man. They take care of collecting rent, and the day to day business if, say, a plumber needs to be called (I just have to sign off on it). This at a 6% fee of the monthly rent is quite worth it to avoid any hassle. The rent income also fully covers the mortgage of the new house so basically my living costs are for free.