- 2. Take a reputable real estate investment
training seminar. As a general rule, bigger is better: trust
professionals who offer courses at well-known convention
centers or training institutions. In general, it's also a good
rule of thumb to head to your bookstore rather than the
Internet if you want to read about real estate investing, as
there are many websites that don't deliver what they promise.
- 3. Learn to identify motivated sellers. A
motivated seller is a person who, for one reason or another,
has to sell her home relatively quickly. Often, you can buy a
home for thousands less than its market value from a motivated
seller, making what amounts to an instant profit.
- 4. Make sure you have enough knowledge to be able
to make your own assessment of a house's structural soundness.
If not, bring along someone who does when you go house-hunting,
or consider hiring an appraiser if you're serious about a
particular property and want an independent evaluation of its
value.
5. Make a down payment on the home of your choice
and rent it out as soon as possible, at as long a term as you
can get at a rate that at least covers (if not exceeds) the sum
of your monthly mortgage, fees and property taxes.
- 7. Use the equity you've built up in your
investment property to put a down payment on another house, if
you want to build your own mini-real estate empire. You can
continue to buy and rent out homes in this manner to whatever
degree you consider manageable in your present situation.
8. Remember that buying, renting out then selling or
using a home's equity for further investing is but one of many
real estate investing
strategies. You can also flip houses
by buying them at below-market rates, having improvements made
then selling them at a profit. You can also invest in
commercial real estate, such as apartment buildings, mobile
home parks, strip malls and other lands that businesses use.
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