Inman

How to recognize value in junk houses

Alexey Stiop / Shutterstock.com

I have made a good career in San Antonio real estate investing by buying and selling under-market-value properties (“junk” houses) that most investors would never touch. Then, I owner finance them for maintenance-free cash flow, which has the added benefit of giving a hardworking family a chance to own their own home.

Sure, the under-market-value houses that I buy are ugly at first glance, but the smart investor needs to look underneath that ugliness and see the value of the home and the area around it.

[Tweet “A smart investor needs to look underneath that ugliness and see the value of the home.”]

Last week, I had yet another junk house success story that I wanted to share with you. Last year, I bought this junk house:

It sat vacant for several years, and I bought it in an estate sale in September 2015. No question that this house was ugly and run down:

However, this under-market-value property is located in a booming area a few miles west of downtown San Antonio. The Bexar County government has invested millions of dollars in this area with new running trails, parks, shopping plazas, green space and more. Just two miles from this junk property is the San Antonio Riverwalk, a tourist mecca.

Also, this distressed property has nice, owner-occupied homes right next to it worth $100,000:

So I snatched up the house and resold it to my out-of-state investor for $25,000 late last year. The regular investor cannot see past the temporary ugliness of the under-market-value house, but I can.

After my investor purchased the home, I did $27,000 in rehab:

Now the under-market-value property looks like this:

[Inman Slideshow]

The ARV on this distressed property is $89,000, and we completed the rehab in mid-January. By the end of January, we already had an owner-finance buyer for it with these terms:

So, the investor bought this out of state investment property for a total of $52,000, and is now earning 15 percent per year in real estate cash flow on a property that he will never have to repair. The buyer of the home will take care of it, and eventually, hopefully, pay off the investor and own the home.

[Tweet “The investor is now earning 15% per year on a property that he will never have to repair.”]

That is the type of under market value property investing that you can do — if you have some cash and if you can see beyond surface ugliness in San Antonio investment property.

John Majalca financially retired in real estate investing in 2006 with more than $35,000 per month in cash flow; he also is a licensed agent. Visit his website, and follow him on LinkedIn.

Email John Majalca.