I Bought a Flip House and It Hasn't Sold!

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  • Опубліковано 17 лис 2024

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  • @ghost307
    @ghost307 Рік тому +628

    If flipping houses was such a guaranteed moneymaker, the Contractors would be the ones buying the houses and renovating them at cost and making a ton of money.

    • @jayc4715
      @jayc4715 Рік тому +63

      Nah...you'd think that .but they lack the mentality

    • @patrickchilds5486
      @patrickchilds5486 Рік тому +19

      Here in Florida they have been doing just that. Made a lot of money but a couple near us they got stuck holding.

    • @diytacoma5758
      @diytacoma5758 Рік тому +7

      The contractors are making money from things like this but their is just not that many houses to do this with

    • @tgtongue
      @tgtongue Рік тому +32

      Contractors have waaaaayyy too much on their plate to deal with flipping. It’s one thing when the customer is paying but another when the contractor has to fork out cash for the property, expenses, materials, and their own employees. That’s extreme capital to put at risk!

    • @mr.isaiah1275
      @mr.isaiah1275 Рік тому +7

      @@patrickchilds5486Yeah flipping in South Florida is as easy as ever. No inventory at all down here, which helps sell nice houses fast

  • @aaronalquiza9680
    @aaronalquiza9680 Рік тому +338

    you know... i think these people might be part of the reason why home prices have spiked more than expected.

    • @midlifecrisis7888
      @midlifecrisis7888 Рік тому +36

      Speculators drive up prices. Blackrock is the biggest culprit though. Buying up whole neighborhoods

    • @aaronalquiza9680
      @aaronalquiza9680 Рік тому +13

      @@midlifecrisis7888 in a way, house flipping is kinda speculative, isn't it? you buy a house that, when you touch it up a bit, you expect it to sell for more, giving you profit. And Blackrock is a scaled up (by many orders of magnitude) version of it. and then yeah, there's the interest rates as well.

    • @TheTricky44
      @TheTricky44 Рік тому +9

      More so companies like Blackrock

    • @Chiefbadbruuuuuh
      @Chiefbadbruuuuuh Рік тому +6

      Scarcity drives up prices, not enough houses have been built since the Great Recession.

    • @jwlsngold5026
      @jwlsngold5026 Рік тому +5

      Funny you should say that. My dad sold (streetcsign buyer) his house (circa 1952) way under market because he wanted a quick sale.
      His house was then sold less than 30 days later for +$170k, then it was flipped, put on the market for $949k, listing removed, put back on the market for $999k sold for $949,027, it is now back on the market for $989k, all of this in the span of 13 months.
      From the pictures it was modernized and added on to, but still has no garage, sqft 2048.

  • @arga400
    @arga400 Рік тому +139

    If nobody is buying the product you're selling at the price you're selling it at, you're overvaluing your product.

    • @llcross04
      @llcross04 Рік тому +10

      Bingo. The housing market has shifted and unfortunately he is behind the 8 ball

    • @mattschmitt9924
      @mattschmitt9924 Рік тому +4

      Very true. The buyer determines the price. They set the market.

    • @Vydio
      @Vydio Рік тому +1

      Or your produce is junk.

    • @obie1coby
      @obie1coby Рік тому

      This is always the truth

  • @cherrypieforbreakfast1499
    @cherrypieforbreakfast1499 Рік тому +128

    Most common flipper mistakes;
    1. Paid too much for the house. You make your money on the buy, not the sell.
    2. Over personalizing the house. For flipping, the most generic popular fixtures and colors work best.
    3. Poor workmanship is rampant in flips. House probably looks like crap.

    • @amgooder
      @amgooder Рік тому +17

      You forgot location location location...

    • @thebastardgift
      @thebastardgift Рік тому +5

      I agree other than the colors. New homeowners will paint to their preference, so for staging keep it neutral and add sparks of color in towels, pillows, a bowl of fruit, a small accent wall. If every room is painted and potential homebuyers hate it, they will consider painting a burden but if just left neutral painting it, as the new owners, becomes an adventure.

    • @amgooder
      @amgooder Рік тому +11

      @@thebastardgift Most flippers got the memo...use ONLY 2 colors...white and gray...(the new beige)

    • @SparkeyCox
      @SparkeyCox Рік тому +1

      @@amgooder - I am not most flippers - but LOL

    • @DMoney505
      @DMoney505 Рік тому +6

      Number one is key!!! That’s the question what did he buy this house for? Probably overpaid with hopes of selling high….

  • @Julian-zc9vm
    @Julian-zc9vm Рік тому +116

    You often see these flips sit on the market for long periods of time. Usually they have a fatal flaw, like only having one bathroom, or an awkwardly laid out very small kitchen, or all of the bedrooms are be way too small. They are basically situations where any reasonable person would need to basically finish the job and blow out a wall or two to reconfigure the floor plan in a better way, and the clientele of homebuyers who are interested in flips don’t want to do that, they want a move in ready house.

    • @DB-bw5fz
      @DB-bw5fz Рік тому +18

      Spot on. Why would I as a buyer pay more for a “flipped” house that I ultimately will have to put more work into, when I could skip the middle man, buy a home that is in obvious need of some work for less, and then spend the extra money on doing things the way I want. I know where the mentality of a flipper lies…and it’s not on ensuring the best work possible is done to the building….

    • @ghost307
      @ghost307 Рік тому +9

      @@DB-bw5fz Especially when buying it involves being stuck with someone else's design.
      Repainting is easy, but why should I get stuck with a newly remodeled kitchen that I wish had been done differently.
      Much better to buy a fixer-upper and spend the money to fix it up exactly the way that you want it.

    • @treasurethetime2463
      @treasurethetime2463 Рік тому +7

      100. There is something weird that he didn't address. A newly renovated home at a solid price will sell easily.

    • @llcross04
      @llcross04 Рік тому +3

      All great points.... Why pay 225k + $$$$ for something you have to remodel when you can pay 250k and be done

    • @DB-bw5fz
      @DB-bw5fz Рік тому +3

      @@treasurethetime2463 I agree. The problem though is that most flipped homes don’t have well though out and executed renovations done to them. They are done with the sole intent of getting a good return on their investment, so appearance and cost outlay will have a large effect on the work that is being done. Buying a turn key, fully renovated house is likely the better way to go…but buying a house in obvious need of work and paying to do the work is likely to be the better way to go over buying a “flip”.

  • @blackstar4686
    @blackstar4686 Рік тому +538

    In 2020, I sold a couple of properties and now I'm patiently waiting for a potential decrease in housing prices so that I can purchase a property at a more affordable price. In the meantime, I have been considering investing in stocks as an alternative. Do you have any thoughts on whether it is a favorable time to make a purchase? I often hear people describe the current situation as chaotic and unpredictable. However, I also come across articles where individuals claim to have made over $225k in trades within a week. I'm curious to understand how this is possible.

    • @ancientfrankia5779
      @ancientfrankia5779 Рік тому

      I sold a couple of homes in the Tampa area for pretty good cash and I'm thinking to just leave it in stocks while waiting for a house crash to happen and as well avoid inflation, but is this really a good time to buy stocks? I hear it's a madhouse right now and I still hear folks are raking in huge 6figure profits by the weeks and I'd love to know how.

    • @Natalieneptune469
      @Natalieneptune469 Рік тому

      look at it this way, while some folks are waiting to make minimal profits when stocks recover, some others folks already know where to look and what to do to make hefty gains in these times, so yea, it all boils down to knowledge to risk mitigation.

    • @p.for_peaches7397
      @p.for_peaches7397 Рік тому

      True, I was in dilemma myself due to this chaotic market, wasn't sure if to sell or just wait a little longer, 75% of my portfolio was tanking and in the red and the economy isn’t looking promising, but I began gaining clarity and have more confidence in my investment through an investment adviser, I know most DlY investors like me would say advisors aren't essential, but come to think of it, they're better trained and equipped at this and if I have to give just a little amount in fees for me to be able to net $650K in less than 8months like I did this year, I truly don't mind.

    • @flaviobaku-jk5hc
      @flaviobaku-jk5hc Рік тому

      @@p.for_peaches7397 Omg 650K this year? that’s neat, I was actually reading an articles this morning on Bloomberg about techniques to gain in this dip, but I’m just a noob so i don't understand most of it, who is this adviser that guides you, I’m having serious troubles with my portfolio

    • @p.for_peaches7397
      @p.for_peaches7397 Рік тому

      Sharon Kay Hanna is actually the one that guides me, she’s a highly-sought out adviser, so I’m not certain she’s accepting new intakes, but you can give it a shot. It wouldn’t be proper to just Leave her number Lying around, but she has a webpage you can look at if you google her name.

  • @too-da-loo
    @too-da-loo Рік тому +31

    Many flippers who appear successful on TV have their own construction crews who appear to be available anytime. If you are an independent needing quotes and being scheduled you are already on a losing path.

  • @ghost307
    @ghost307 Рік тому +84

    I had prospective buyers tell me that they didn't like the kitchen, hated the layout, thought the garage was too small, etc. The realtor is saying what they are because they don't want to lose you as a seller. You need to find out why the people who didn't make an offer why they walked away.

    • @pingedpongball
      @pingedpongball Рік тому +11

      Yep… not getting honest feedback. Surprised he hasn’t gathered more data and objectively critiqued his property

    • @zesolodar
      @zesolodar Рік тому +8

      yep i flip/ rent houses and my realtor follows up with every single person who looks at the house and asks every agent what they liked and didnt like

    • @bc_usa
      @bc_usa Рік тому

      You can't handle the truth!!!

  • @joshuatree28
    @joshuatree28 Рік тому +22

    Dave should just do his own real estate show like Delaney does for relationships. Let people call in with their real estate questions and issues.

  • @curiouscat3384
    @curiouscat3384 Рік тому +32

    I'd say having new houses nearby is a detriment, not an advantage for comparing prices. A LOT of people would rather have a NEW house regardless of the quality of the renovation. If the builder is offering financing that's very appealing for first time buyers.

    • @Matt-cr4vv
      @Matt-cr4vv Рік тому

      Agreed. A lot of people will pay more to get a brand new house versus a rebuild if the prices are in the same universe. If I can get a new home for let’s say $260K like the price he mentioned versus $217K for his I’m going for the new one I’d guess. In my area that mortgage would be around $300 different and I think a lot of people are going to spend that $300 more every month to have brand new over the rebuild. It would need to be significantly cheaper I think to be worth passing up on the new house or at least it would need to be for me. The same reason why I didn’t buy a condo a number of years ago and bought an older home with some improvements made to it instead. I liked the idea of a condo and having all new everything at a price I could manage but someone quickly pointed out to me that there is no resale market here for them and often you’re lucky to get out even because they build condo complexes so often that there’s almost always a brand new one near whatever yours costs and when the costs are close more people will elect to go for new. This dude dived into something he didn’t have a clue about and it blew up on him.

  • @Thrakerzog
    @Thrakerzog Рік тому +236

    I'm a contractor, I can tell from this fellow that he cheaped out on EVERYTHING! He lost contractors because he was constantly trying to do the absolute minimum in spite of professional recommendations. I imagine the people who come to see the house bring their own inspectors who tell them STAY AWAY. Like Dave said, he saw people on TikTok or any HGTV show making tons of money and he thought that he could do that too.

    • @mikesmith-wk7vy
      @mikesmith-wk7vy Рік тому +35

      My brother just bought a house and the homes he looked at you can tell a flipper was involved because all the materials the floors counters etc have this trendy modern cheap junk look to it nothing is quality material

    • @genxx2724
      @genxx2724 Рік тому +21

      They do a cheap job on those shows and make it look fast and easy. I would never buy a flip. I want quality, not a cheap job and problems they slapped a band-aid on.

    • @xlerb2286
      @xlerb2286 Рік тому +14

      We looked at a house like that. It was a run down house in a high priced neighborhood and we'd looked at it when it was for sale before being flipped. It needed work but the structure was good and it still had all the original woodwork, stained glass lighting fixtures, etc. We looked at it again after a flipper bought it and fixed it up. Woodwork ripped out, poor job of sheetrocking, cheapest possible fixtures, all work poorly done. Hardwood floors (if they were still there) covered up with cheap carpet. House was on the market for ages and I suspect it sold for way less than the initial price.

    • @genxx2724
      @genxx2724 Рік тому +12

      @@xlerb2286 That’s heartbreaking. It’s criminal to rip out woodwork and replace it with cheap, trendy stuff, because the craftsmanship to build such a house no longer exists.

    • @karlabritfeld7104
      @karlabritfeld7104 Рік тому +6

      Never mind flippers, I've bought houses from regular people who lived in their places for years and never bothered to maintain them. Utter garbage and the real estate agents advertised then as "immaculately maintained." Absolute lies.

  • @adamseidel9780
    @adamseidel9780 Рік тому +34

    “I don’t know why it’s not selling.”
    Another reason why it’s dangerous to do this. You took a risky bet in an industry that you don’t have experience in and clearly don’t understand well. You didn’t know about contracting, how to sell a house, etc. like Buffet says, the most important thing in making an investment is UNDERSTANDING THE BUSINESS.

    • @laneyluneva
      @laneyluneva Рік тому +2

      That's what especially struck me too. He got into flipping and has no knowledge of why it's not selling??? what?! Why take such a risk if he didn't understand the business at all....baffling.

  • @AmazingChinaToday
    @AmazingChinaToday Рік тому +1

    No offers means overpriced.

  • @RaleighLink
    @RaleighLink Рік тому +52

    I’m glad people like this guy are having a hard time. Fix and flips are a part of why housing prices are out of control. This guy most likely did cheap work and expected a high return, don’t buy a house unless you intend to keep it for a while.

    • @tarheel181
      @tarheel181 Рік тому +3

      There are a lot more knuckleheads out there....wait until Q4, hasn't even started yet.....Roll Tide!

    • @johanvanstaden2408
      @johanvanstaden2408 Рік тому +2

      Prices are determined by what buyers are willing to pay; not by what sellers want to ask.
      Edit: And what buyers are willing to pay, are most closely related to finance terms. If interest rates go down again, and loan terms are extended to 40 years, most people will not tame their desires for more, and will willingly enslave themselves even more - house prices will rise greatly.

    • @abark
      @abark Рік тому +2

      No people like this have no impact on the market whatsoever. This guy isn't even a drop in the bucket compared to hedge funds, and institutional buyers like Berkshire Hathaway and Blackrock. You really think someone flipping 1 house is driving market prices and not Zillow buying houses unseen?

    • @tarheel181
      @tarheel181 Рік тому +1

      @@abark Berkshire Hathaway does not buy houses Brother, they just take a fee for selling them. Over 80% of the SFR bidness is small landlords, not Blackrock and other institutional owners, especially 40 miles outside of Austin! Bwaha

    • @zachpierce641
      @zachpierce641 Рік тому +2

      I disagree …I’m not a house flipper nor know one , but if the flipper is coming, and redoing a house, making it nicer, and then selling it it’s not driving up prices for other houses. What would drive up prices is the fact you have 100 people looking for a house and there’s 20 available
      It’s all supply and demand. They help the market by making more supply honestly . I don’t see how it hurts

  • @melanieb2132
    @melanieb2132 Рік тому +3

    I read an article that Austin Texas housing market is about to burst.
    Airbnb's are down 50%. Yikes.

  • @trebmaster
    @trebmaster Рік тому +9

    Overconfidence and ignorance are brothers to each other.

  • @randomized4266
    @randomized4266 Рік тому +3

    his girl knew this was out of his ballpark

  • @EmilyAllan
    @EmilyAllan Рік тому +74

    Nobody wants to buy from a greedy flipper, especially if that flip is not A+ executed. People read the sale history. They see greed and walk away.

    • @danettewelborn5577
      @danettewelborn5577 Рік тому

      *sale history not sell

    • @justincrasi4638
      @justincrasi4638 Рік тому +3

      sorry this is not true. I'm a contractor and i've literally seen tons of houses sell way over asking and they were done by flippers. if the product is good, and the value is there, the buyer couldn't care less. same on the other side. sellers sell their homes to flippers all the time bc they have cash, even when other buyers will write the sellers personal letters about their family and children and their future life, sellers don't care. 90% time is about money and value, period.

    • @EmilyAllan
      @EmilyAllan Рік тому

      @@danettewelborn5577 - Ah yes. Thank you. Corrected.

    • @EmilyAllan
      @EmilyAllan Рік тому +1

      @@justincrasi4638 - I've watched a lot of Mike Holmes on Make It Right and its scared me a lot. That's why I mentioned A+ flippers. It someone paints some walls and retiles a floor but doesn't address structural or internal issues such as mold, asbestos, board rot, pests, foundational issues, sewer, flooding, etc... the flipper can do a lot of damage by not disclosing and literally painting over the problems. 2 houses on my block were flipped. BOTH houses had to have very expensive repairs done by the new owners in the first year. Flipper made 200k + on the sales, but likely didn't disclose the structural issues. Home owners should sue, but often don't. I like the GOOD flippers, and what I'm trying to say is that people don't want to buy from flippers that are greedily flipping junk houses and not disclosing the problems they taped and painted over. It has to be a quality A+ job, otherwise buyers are walking away if they see a recent flip. Too much of a gamble to buy a these prices.

    • @firefly9838
      @firefly9838 Рік тому

      @@justincrasi4638rich people don't care about the clear greed. Most normies do

  • @benskeen9793
    @benskeen9793 Рік тому +128

    Jade nailed it. This guy is hearing it from his wife every day this thing sits on the market. 😂

    • @ghost307
      @ghost307 Рік тому +15

      Being able to say "I told you so" is one of the major benefits of being married.
      Remember that marriage means finding that one special person who you want to annoy for the rest of your life.

    • @jasonrodgers9063
      @jasonrodgers9063 Рік тому

      TRUE! !!!

    • @chrisestes2383
      @chrisestes2383 Рік тому +4

      She'll be saying it till one of them dies lol

    • @TheSubmissionChannel
      @TheSubmissionChannel Рік тому +1

      Jade is a dime piece!

    • @nmalele0909
      @nmalele0909 Рік тому +1

      A whole damn year and a half😂

  • @michaelhurley545
    @michaelhurley545 Рік тому +8

    As a Realtor here in Florida i see all the time these flippers get a great deal a house then cut every corner and go cheap on the fix then ask 10 to15% higher then every other house in he neighborhood. Be careful buying from flipper investors most are out for the quick buck at the buyers expense.

  • @TheFlyingZulu
    @TheFlyingZulu Рік тому +86

    Good! I hope this happens more often... we need the supply to go much higher. The prices of houses are way overinflated.

    • @rickdunn3863
      @rickdunn3863 Рік тому +11

      HOW SAD, hoping other people misery. WHAT TYPE OF PERSON WISHES ANOTHER HUMAN HARM?

    • @TheFlyingZulu
      @TheFlyingZulu Рік тому

      @@rickdunn3863 People like this guy who is trying to jump onto the train of SCREWING OVER OTHER people with highly inflated house prices. They're screwing over OTHER people trying to buy a house as a reasonable and fair price.

    • @random-nz7dy
      @random-nz7dy Рік тому +15

      ​@@rickdunn3863I don't think they are wishing misfortune.
      But it's been frustrating over the last few years for people trying to buy homes to see people coming in flipping homes by basically putting lipstick on a pig and then jacking the price way the hell up.
      Then everyone with a lot of money thought "Hey I'm going to buy some piece of crap and then flip it x3 it's current value".
      I'm sorry for this person unfortunate situation. But as somebody trying to buy a home I can see where you would see it promising to see situations like this that could contribute to a better supply vs demand situation for the buyers

    • @TheFlyingZulu
      @TheFlyingZulu Рік тому +17

      @@rickdunn3863 This guy was going for a quick buck and got screwed. Good for him. Even Dave said he has no patience for it.

    • @brett4932
      @brett4932 Рік тому +2

      I mean - caller is actively adding to supply with this listing. The problem is they are in at a bad time and went way over budget. Frankly, the country is in desperate need of more companies looking to fix up deteriorating inventory for residential use. But there’s a huge shortage of people able and willing to take on that risk right now as well.

  • @adamseidel9780
    @adamseidel9780 Рік тому +18

    I’m not sure I understand the concept of flipping houses if you aren’t able to personally do a sizable share of the contractor work. The whole point is converting that sweat equity into cash dollars. That also lowers your risk. You’re gonna have additional labor and materials costs, and you probably can’t do everything, but if you’re ENTIRELY going outside, that co tractor margin is just gonna take so much of the profit.

    • @marlonyoutube3496
      @marlonyoutube3496 Рік тому

      If you have to work to fix the house ,you are not investing, you are working to get pay for your labor job

    • @adamseidel9780
      @adamseidel9780 Рік тому +1

      @@marlonyoutube3496 tell me you don’t know anything about small businesses without telling me you don’t know anything about small businesses

    • @marlonyoutube3496
      @marlonyoutube3496 Рік тому +4

      @adamseidel9780 🤣🤣 I have 2 small business, I'm a contractor with 18 workers, we make a lot of money from people like you ,and you ended up broke

    • @adamseidel9780
      @adamseidel9780 Рік тому +3

      @@marlonyoutube3496 people like me? I don’t flip houses and I just wrote how it doesn’t make sense to flip houses if you’re just going to pay contractors instead of do much of it yourself. Did you learn to read?

    • @Fishouta
      @Fishouta Рік тому +1

      Most people have no clue how to do the work, even with instructions. Many even think they do, when they really don't. Even working as your own general contractor, which I have done, takes experience and knowledge including people skills.

  • @random-nz7dy
    @random-nz7dy Рік тому +85

    So glad Dave took this call. This guy needed to be scolded hardcore to avoid further financially daming mistakes.
    And this is Dave's area of expertise so he's able to facilitate explaining the failure really well.
    Even with getting to the point on the guy comping a renovate with a nww build.

    • @livinthedream4479
      @livinthedream4479 Рік тому +3

      I don’t think he needs a scolding . He is also aware that he’s losing money

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius Рік тому +7

      He needs to be scolded so much that he never does this again.

    • @thebastardgift
      @thebastardgift Рік тому +10

      I don't think Dave scolded him. Dave speaks with a reality tone and people today are so soft that they perceive an honest conversation without flowers as harsh.

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius Рік тому

      @@thebastardgift That's a good point. Too many people today are soft and weak. Look at "safe spaces" at schools. People have gotten wimpy.

    • @zachgreen759
      @zachgreen759 Рік тому +1

      @@thebastardgift that was a scolding tone their at the end.

  • @this_time_imperfect
    @this_time_imperfect Рік тому +4

    People forget that with “Risk Vs. Reward” sometimes there is no reward, that’s the reality of taking a risk.

  • @todd2456
    @todd2456 Рік тому +8

    Man, that poor guy got roasted to a crisp by Dave.

  • @MrMustangrick
    @MrMustangrick Рік тому +2

    Poor location, poor planning and estimates. Stupid hurts.

  • @Agingcowboy92
    @Agingcowboy92 Рік тому +35

    The problem with flips is people skip corners and have so many issues. I got a client under contract right now and the inspection came back with foundation issues 😂😂😂

    • @adrianmechelle3784
      @adrianmechelle3784 Рік тому +3

      I consistently find that the floors are done poorly. It’s rather insulting.

    • @Agingcowboy92
      @Agingcowboy92 Рік тому +1

      @adrianmechelle3784 they did really good on the surface but once they got an inspector about 20k worth of issues came up. See flipping works if you do it the right way

    • @mattschmitt9924
      @mattschmitt9924 Рік тому +1

      ​@@Agingcowboy92was there no inspection done by the flippers? Negotiate it into the contract.

    • @mr.isaiah1275
      @mr.isaiah1275 Рік тому +3

      100”% !!!! People cut corners when flipping houses because they don’t care about the quality, they just want a quick buck. But good quality houses will sell. Especially in South Florida.

    • @terminaterjohn
      @terminaterjohn Рік тому

      dayum!

  • @LAZERZ-OP
    @LAZERZ-OP Рік тому +67

    Nobody wants the house probably because the flipper did a terrible job on fixing things up. A tale as old as time

    • @AmericanWears
      @AmericanWears Рік тому +1

      It’s location if anything, he said he’s an hour outside of Austin probably with nothing much around, people don’t want to do that commute. Houses near me with mold and turds on the ground are gone within days especially if it’s listed in the 200k range.

    • @mr.isaiah1275
      @mr.isaiah1275 Рік тому

      Maybe if them rush for a quick buck. It has to be done right in order for them to sell quickly.

    • @mr.isaiah1275
      @mr.isaiah1275 Рік тому +7

      Also if he hired 3 different contractors, with 3 different work styles…something ain’t right

    • @nohemivasquez4909
      @nohemivasquez4909 Рік тому +2

      I read an add for a 1 bed 1 bath for rent in Austin. I had to do a doble take browsing the pictures of the house. One wall had such a bad repair, you could see that there is a huge hole, most likely will need a new sheet rock. They just plastered tape and more tape, about 10 rows on the hole and painted over it. Asking for 1400 in rent. I wonder what other problems the owner tried to cover . God bless the poor tenant that gets into that property.

  • @ifronnin
    @ifronnin Рік тому +21

    A house around here listed for 365K in September of last year. It's a good place, but outrageously priced for the area. A couple of weeks ago I saw the price reduced to 200K. It still won't sell. It's a small farmhouse and barn but half an hour away from any jobs. Nobody wants to go 200K in debt at 9% interest when they can rent an apartment close to work for the same monthly payment. In a way, the housing market is crashing due to inflation.

    • @KatieBellino
      @KatieBellino Рік тому +2

      In my state, people drive a 1/2 hour to work on the regular. A house for the same monthly payment as a rent would be snapped up in a heartbeat.

    • @ifronnin
      @ifronnin Рік тому

      @@KatieBellino Around here the problem is the distance, not so much the time. A 30 minute drive is thirty miles, which in the winter might mean a two hour drive or not making it at all.

    • @KatieBellino
      @KatieBellino Рік тому +1

      @@ifronnin Ah, yes, we're pretty rural in Maine too, but 30 minutes is closer to 15 miles, so an hour if it's a bad winter day. A lot of people go ahead and do it.

  • @isaacraze4301
    @isaacraze4301 Рік тому +6

    I used to flip houses, it's definitely not as easy of a market nowadays. With the way the economy is going I'm glad I stopped when I did.

  • @belenpg7688
    @belenpg7688 Рік тому +27

    I can guarantee this guy got a house in the worst part of town, painted some walls, got the cheapest deals he could get with the contractors, and now he wants to sell a piece of dog 💩 for 217 when it’s worth 100k less than that. People know, people tell. Buyers aren’t stupid, that’s why it ain’t selling. He thought he could do the bare minimum, but that’s not how it works, dude. These are places folks are gonna live in. Also, wife here is not without fault, she went in just as much as he did. She should have said no if she “told him so”

    • @DMoney505
      @DMoney505 Рік тому +4

      And overpaid! He should be able to dump it and not lose much. Worst case break even, He’s in bad shape with this property.

  • @tduck828
    @tduck828 Рік тому +12

    Yep. Its not as easy as the shows make it out to be. Most DO NOT make money

  • @RandomVids519
    @RandomVids519 Рік тому +36

    This happened to a house around the corner from me they fixed it all up and just missed the market as interest rates sky rocketed. Nobody wanted to buy this overpriced small house so now 3 years later they rented it out i kinda feel bad for the person that owned it they left it empty for over a year hoping it would sell what a time to be alive😅

    • @neilsmith9066
      @neilsmith9066 Рік тому +2

      They rented it out went to the bank the next day the bank gave them a ton of money the renter pays the mortgage and the flipper went and flipped another house happens every day!

    • @supershrpy
      @supershrpy Рік тому +1

      Renting is where the money is anyhow. Who wants to pay capital gains??? Knock knock

  • @willfishing5605
    @willfishing5605 Рік тому +2

    Going through 2 contractors, you got a bad contractor, going through 3, you're the problem

  • @midlifecrisis7888
    @midlifecrisis7888 Рік тому +38

    That house is out in the sticks. Nobody wants to drive 1 hour outside of town. 😂

    • @sanitary103
      @sanitary103 Рік тому +11

      Location is king in real estate.

    • @llcross04
      @llcross04 Рік тому +11

      Austin is relatively small. 1 hour away in any direction is no longer Austin

    • @blackworldtraveler3711
      @blackworldtraveler3711 Рік тому +1

      Yes people do.
      It's what FIRE and working from home is all about.

    • @zesolodar
      @zesolodar Рік тому +3

      not necessarily true. i do the same thing and all my properties (rentals) are in the sticks about an hour away from the closest major area and i can rent/ sell them all day long. huge market for property 1 hour outside of a place like austin, the prob his he prob overvalued the property when he bought it

    • @noshrinkingviolet007
      @noshrinkingviolet007 Рік тому

      ​@@blackworldtraveler3711Idk abt "FIRE" but I agree with you on wfh. Been homebased since 2014, foubd a small, less expensive town, and stockpiling cash. The idea that people can't work "real" jobs from home is bunk.

  • @shouse5110
    @shouse5110 Рік тому +5

    so, you borrowed on your home to buy a flip, and now the housing market turns,,,,great move there.

  • @amylee6038
    @amylee6038 Рік тому +5

    it seems to me that flipping a house would do a lot of damage to it.

  • @djsausagebiscuits
    @djsausagebiscuits Рік тому +6

    Oh man that last 20 seconds was gold

  • @cato451
    @cato451 Рік тому +41

    Ah yes the house flipper nimrods. Here’s a clue: it’s way over priced.

    • @kathleenhazy6126
      @kathleenhazy6126 Рік тому +1

      😂😂😂

    • @troyspears6470
      @troyspears6470 Рік тому +14

      These flippers will paints the cabinets and put in some new vinyl flooring and think they deserve $100k in profit

    • @midlifecrisis7888
      @midlifecrisis7888 Рік тому +3

      Too many amateurs out there. 😂. They got lucky during Covid that’s it.

    • @ghost307
      @ghost307 Рік тому +1

      Or it's way too customized. Or if all the other houses have Corian and you have granite for example.

  • @terrybumpass4799
    @terrybumpass4799 Рік тому +9

    Using a real estate agent as a financial advisor is not a good idea.

  • @ericwalker8382
    @ericwalker8382 Рік тому +3

    "I went into debt on a speculative investment. What should I do?". Don't go into debt on a speculative investment.

  • @kuffkitten
    @kuffkitten Рік тому +2

    And the wife will NEVER let him forget.

  • @jillgott6567
    @jillgott6567 Рік тому +6

    Flipping / renovating houses makes for good television.

  • @BridgeStamford
    @BridgeStamford Рік тому +23

    Tic tac people doing seminars 😂

    • @devdhaliwal6152
      @devdhaliwal6152 Рік тому +4

      😂 Tic Tac. Dave is so funny when he says this.

    • @terminaterjohn
      @terminaterjohn Рік тому +1

      those tic tacers

    • @OTOWN2STOCKTOWN
      @OTOWN2STOCKTOWN Рік тому +1

      He did say correctly at one point at least bless his heart 🤓

    • @genxx2724
      @genxx2724 Рік тому +1

      @@devdhaliwal6152 Tic Tac is the perfect name for them.

    • @Caliabra
      @Caliabra Рік тому +1

      Those tic tac-ers are really the worst though 😂

  • @michaellenahan9830
    @michaellenahan9830 Рік тому +6

    The importance of estimating renovation time. He did it when the market was trending up which was ideal for flipping but the time of construction really set him back. Prob would’ve made a profit after 3 months. I prefer the idea of doing it yourself too. No need to make it an LA mansion, just have to make it appealing and marketable.

  • @kensmart1976
    @kensmart1976 Рік тому +6

    He bought high at the housing peak and now selling in a down market.

    • @dacokc
      @dacokc Рік тому +2

      I thought that’s what they always say… “but high, sell low”…

  • @ryanwolf4101
    @ryanwolf4101 Рік тому +2

    He bought in the peak of the bubble (at least in the Austin area) and now selling when values have dropped significantly (in the Austin area).

  • @fhuber7507
    @fhuber7507 Рік тому +7

    Flip houses only work if the market is exploding and you do most of the renovations yourself.

    • @fhuber7507
      @fhuber7507 Рік тому

      He could go into being a landlord... mitigate the damage by holding on until the market is better. Rental income paying most of the mortgage.
      Not the ideal solution and it violates the Ramsey plan of getting out of debt ASAP.

    • @Vydio
      @Vydio Рік тому +2

      Thing is, half the population thinks they can do the renovations themselves. Most can not.

    • @alexlopez5800
      @alexlopez5800 Рік тому

      Flipping 101

  • @CaptainUnconventional
    @CaptainUnconventional Рік тому +1

    Flip mistakes -1 - taking out walls for " open concept " . Original design rarely accomodates it. -2- Granite every surface. Granite takes a crew and $$$. There are other great options. -3- Gutting good kitchen cabinets. New doors or new stain could be all that is needed.

  • @dacokc
    @dacokc Рік тому +32

    What sucks is if he invested $50,000 in s&p 500 right now he would have been way in the green..

    • @waflletoast11
      @waflletoast11 Рік тому +1

      @@wordsalad01 low risk low return, s%p is a mediocre investment for a 2 year period.

    • @dacokc
      @dacokc Рік тому +1

      Way in the green is an overstatement… but most things I own are recovered from 2021 crash.
      I only threw out SP because it’s a name most people recognize. RECOVERED is better than a loss it sounds like this guy is gonna take..
      However, if you continued to dollar cost average and continue to invest through the recession you bought in at some nice low points and have had a good run in the last year.
      FSELX is one of my favorites. Goes on some nice streaks.

    • @coniccinoc
      @coniccinoc Рік тому +4

      @@dacokc Using an online investment calculator, I found out that $50k invested in SnP back in 2021 would be worth over $58k today, roughly 5% a year. The money would be easy to get at and you would not lose 6% to a real estate agent, money to a title company, loan interest, taxes... Basically, I am agreeing with you, you would be way in the green when compared with flipping.

    • @jimroscovius
      @jimroscovius Рік тому +1

      I have mutual funds and they are making money.

    • @blackspiderman1887
      @blackspiderman1887 Рік тому

      That's about to drop soon

  • @milesralls7972
    @milesralls7972 Рік тому +26

    I’m 20, bought a house to flip and I’m getting absolutely dicked down lol, it really isn’t as easy as these people online make it seem.

    • @GefilteFish.
      @GefilteFish. Рік тому +14

      A lot of those videos are mainly doing those type of videos to get views and get paid via UA-cam/tiktok

    • @mr.isaiah1275
      @mr.isaiah1275 Рік тому +1

      I’m 21 and doing pretty well. What specifically are you struggling with, maybe I can give some insight?

    • @amgooder
      @amgooder Рік тому +5

      😬 people usually say its all about location and workmanship...some "flipped" homes look like they been cleaned...freshly painted old kitchen cabinets and 70's wall panels...pop corn ceilings...wall to wall carpeting to cover squeaky damaged floors...paint color thru out house...white and gray..the new beige..

    • @noshrinkingviolet007
      @noshrinkingviolet007 Рік тому

      I have no idea what dicked down means but your post was hilarious! 😂

    • @JakeStewart1343
      @JakeStewart1343 Рік тому +1

      @@noshrinkingviolet007 "Flacid"

  • @abhadoriya
    @abhadoriya Рік тому +1

    Just open redfin and see it for yourself. In Austin, so many houses are sitting for months at all kind of pricea

  • @jeanqbxx
    @jeanqbxx Рік тому +2

    Don't do things you don't understand.

  • @tamsterscott5957
    @tamsterscott5957 Рік тому +1

    May also be the location? Commuting for an hour can become 2 hours till at rush hour.
    It's an hour outside of Austin. There are no 200k houses in Austin worth living in.

  • @jamesjackalone5486
    @jamesjackalone5486 Рік тому +3

    Remember not so long ago when Dave said the housing market doesn't go down?

  • @mikesmith-wk7vy
    @mikesmith-wk7vy Рік тому +2

    Flipped homes suck, cheap particle board renovations for new home prices

  • @mariposavioleta9007
    @mariposavioleta9007 Рік тому +8

    The only time I've seen flips work out well is when it's someone who knows how to properly do the work themselves, get the sales on the items for the renos and sell themselves but they have to be good at all of that which is rare. I know someone who has done this with amazing design talent and did 90-95% of the work herself and flip 1-2 houses/year and make $100k+ doing so. This is very rare to see this though so just like Dave talks about with the Airbnb stuff unless you're gonna put the work in yourself the cost of hiring someone is not worth it to do it

    • @SparkeyCox
      @SparkeyCox Рік тому +2

      I do it that way - aaaannnd last flip Passed a VA inspection for a VA loan. You have to do the work correctly.

    • @obie1coby
      @obie1coby Рік тому

      Sounds like you don't know many professional flippers

  • @CG-ss4jm
    @CG-ss4jm Рік тому +2

    If you took a risk and made a bad investment on the house, that’s on you! Your loss!

  • @KungPowEnterFist
    @KungPowEnterFist Рік тому +7

    The truth is that under normal circumstances (>85% of the time within the cycle), ordinary folks do not make money on flips. The only money being made is from being a realtor, contractor, etc., in your flip. In other words, you need to be the realtor and the contractor (at least some of the trades). The flip itself makes no or very little money. Outside of some incredibly lucky circumstance - inheriting property, etc. - you will never get the house cheap enough, understand/time/budget the renovation/repairs properly, and sell the house for high enough. No one does, not even the so-called pro's. What the pro's do different is that they get their real estate license, contractors license, etc., and make their "profit" that way. Its not actually "profit," however. Its just you being compensated for your time and effort just as if you had a normal job. That other 15% or so of the time in the cycle, everyone including the pro's just straight up lose money on flips. We are in that part of the cycle now. This is why inventory is so short. Selling now means you realize losses for basically anyone who has bought a house in the last 18 months. It doesn't matter if you made mistakes, didn't understand, blah, blah, blah. Even if you did everything perfect as can be done you are almost certainly be in the red if you sold right now. Ordinary folks and pro's alike.

  • @fauxbro1983
    @fauxbro1983 Рік тому +7

    lol the HGTV crowd.

  • @MyLifeThai371
    @MyLifeThai371 Рік тому +12

    I remember in 2018 so many of us around the U.S.A. could not find buyers for our homes. My house, as well as most other people I talked to had our houses on the market for 2 years, even though homes were very affordable at that time.

    • @collin9085
      @collin9085 Рік тому

      That was not an issue here in florida in 2018. Houses were affordable, but also being sold reasonably quickly.

    • @amgooder
      @amgooder Рік тому +1

      In the 80's houses in our area were put on sealed auctions ..for 5k or less...them homes today go for 400k plus...

    • @MyLifeThai371
      @MyLifeThai371 Рік тому +3

      @@amgooder In my area homes were put on auction in 2018 as well. The homes sold for $7000-$15,000. The highest one went for $60,000 because it had a new basement. Now homes are $400,000-$500,000 here.

    • @dacokc
      @dacokc Рік тому +2

      I bought my home in 2017. Was a good time to be a buyer. Low interest rates and in my area prices had not yet spiked.

    • @katysudlow7334
      @katysudlow7334 Рік тому +1

      Where was this? We bought our first home in 2018 and there were open houses hours after a house went on market and many offers by the end of that night. It wasn't quite the bidding wars of the next years (particularly with the cash offers and bidding going $70k above asking etc), but it wasn't a buyer's market in our area, not at all, and especially in the first time homebuyers price range. Twin Cities, MN.

  • @BlueprintCA
    @BlueprintCA Рік тому +6

    This is exactly what I was wondering when I saw everyone and their mother getting in on house flipping and rentals , my family did this in 1980s and they’d buy perfect properties and the profit margin would be around 20% nowadays people buy anything and they go on TikTok and tell people they made millions , sooner or later they’re gonna start undercutting each other because there are millions of them with zero experience and until they learn they gonna ruin the market

  • @AliciaMcIntire
    @AliciaMcIntire Рік тому +3

    You can always tell a crappy flip. That's why no one even wants to do a walk-through. Also, Austin is a terrible market for flipping. Demand is too high there to get a good enough deal to make any margin on a flip

  • @kellyinfanger9192
    @kellyinfanger9192 Рік тому +3

    He is relying on real estate agents to tell him the value. If he doesn't know the value based upon knowledge he personally has; he shouldn't be doing this at all. When I sold my first home (over 40 years ago), a listing agent told me it was worth $55,000. I sold it "by owner" for $65,000. This saved me half of the commission too (I split the commission with the buyer's agent).

  • @zekemontgomery6678
    @zekemontgomery6678 Рік тому +2

    Yeah. It’s a bubble. People wanting to retire by flipping a house. Works for a min. But eventually the cost of borrowing money is not worth is anymore.

  • @philipgerry5228
    @philipgerry5228 Рік тому +4

    On TV the flips are fixed and sold in an hour show. Nothing works as well as “as seen on TV”.

    • @amgooder
      @amgooder Рік тому

      They are not sold in an hour...🙄
      Try half hour...😂gotta subtract commercials.

  • @JA-zh5xi
    @JA-zh5xi Рік тому +15

    House flippers - always the last to know when the market has turned south.

  • @blaze376192
    @blaze376192 Рік тому +1

    Now is the worse possible time to buy a investment property

  • @clarifyingquestions
    @clarifyingquestions Рік тому +5

    Wife knew he did not put the work in.

  • @consumerdebtchitchat
    @consumerdebtchitchat Рік тому +2

    Oooooo. Papa Dave speakin' now !!!!! All better listen up!!!!

  • @Mike-pj1kv
    @Mike-pj1kv Рік тому +2

    If you have extra money to "burn" you can try a house flip, I suppose. Otherwise - bad idea!

  • @chrisgouger9299
    @chrisgouger9299 Рік тому +3

    This is called being a bag holder

  • @railtonfeagus8539
    @railtonfeagus8539 Рік тому +2

    Sounds like the wife is the brains of the outfit. In future he should trust her judgement and ignore his own.

  • @josepha9061
    @josepha9061 Рік тому +1

    Market slowed up in town. Even more an hour out of town.

  • @jonathantaylor6926
    @jonathantaylor6926 Рік тому +2

    This guy probably listened to the Dave Ramsey episode several months ago where he said real estate prices only go up lol. Flipping is a get rich or get poor scheme.

  • @coniccinoc
    @coniccinoc Рік тому +2

    I know new home builders that only remodel now because of low housing demand.

  • @thomaslucio5374
    @thomaslucio5374 Рік тому +15

    Wait for it....sales pitch.
    Just go to Ramsey solutions. 😂😂😂

  • @DMoney505
    @DMoney505 Рік тому +1

    Not buying right, And not understanding the true cost of a rehab has him in a hole. No due diligence, And lack of experience.

  • @bruh_hahaha
    @bruh_hahaha Рік тому +4

    zero sympathy.

  • @Korok96
    @Korok96 Рік тому +1

    Good. I'm tired of people flipping stuff and keeping people from living the American dream

  • @LABoyko
    @LABoyko Рік тому +1

    No one knows for sure what this investor did wrong. Probably a little of everything, but here's what stood out to me. His basis for setting the price came entirely from agent advisement. Agents have access to great information, but they are an unreliable source. Some will want to price aggressively so it sells quick. Others will over-value the property in a sharp-elbow bid to get the listing.
    You have to do your own research and understand the comparables thoroughly before submitting an offer. A house a block away might be 60 years newer or have two more bedrooms or three more bathrooms or a new roof or a new HVAC or a two-car garage or a pool or all of the above.
    A house a block away lists for $260k, but he can't sell his for $217k. The market is never wrong. Stop wasting your time calling radio shows, figure it out and move onto the next one if there is a next one.

  • @ElectricBlueIX
    @ElectricBlueIX Рік тому +3

    Wow…this dude REALLLLY screwed up. He needed this scolding from Dave.

    • @JakeStewart1343
      @JakeStewart1343 Рік тому +1

      He needs to hire a Ramsey approved agent 😂

  • @erikcampbell4806
    @erikcampbell4806 Рік тому +3

    If home 2 won’t sell, maybe he needs to downscale and sell home 1!

  • @aaronmurphy8796
    @aaronmurphy8796 Рік тому +3

    I think he has a shoddy renovation and his realtor doesn’t want to tell him that or he doesn’t want to believe that.

  • @blackspiderman1887
    @blackspiderman1887 Рік тому +2

    New houses today are bad. You get in then a year later issues. I rather have a home with some years to it to see if there is any problems

    • @thebastardgift
      @thebastardgift Рік тому +1

      I would never buy a new built. They are attractive but cheaply made and located in a HOA is the same as having a silent partner as an owner given they can foreclose.

  • @frankm2385
    @frankm2385 Рік тому +2

    He was supposed to do most of the work himself. I'm surprised renting it out wasn't on the table.

  • @tcbridges
    @tcbridges Рік тому +1

    If your going to flip homes you have to do as much of the work yourself as possible.

  • @kornNpunk
    @kornNpunk Рік тому +1

    Sound's like he was testing a quicksand model with one feet but now he realised his dumbness after reaching waist level.

  • @Lon1001
    @Lon1001 Рік тому +2

    If it needs major construction the only people flipping homes are those with the skills to do the majority of the construction work themselves. If you contract the work the only one that profits is the contractor. Otherwise the value would be reflected in the original selling price.

  • @swannyriver75
    @swannyriver75 Рік тому +2

    Like my mama used to say " Something in the milk ain't clean what's wrong with it how many beds, how many bath, inspector evaluation

  • @AB-qx3pf
    @AB-qx3pf Рік тому +2

    The 260 house hasn't sold. It's not a comp. And it's a new build. It's not a comp. If it's not selling, lower the price!

  • @HatedJared
    @HatedJared Рік тому +2

    Its called a risk for a reason. Might win big, might lose.

  • @Danny-fp5lx
    @Danny-fp5lx Рік тому +1

    Wouldn’t it make most sense to hold the property for the next few years, keep paying the mortgage, rent where possible and wait until the value increase? Curious why this wasn’t entertained.

  • @Roxality
    @Roxality Рік тому +4

    Maybe rent it out at this point ?

    • @kennethwers
      @kennethwers Рік тому

      He can then find out renters trash houses, don't more out and don't pay.

  • @YoPhocFays
    @YoPhocFays Рік тому +5

    Amateurs make money in a hot market.
    But when the market drops, they are the first to get slaughtered

    • @mattschmitt9924
      @mattschmitt9924 Рік тому +1

      When the tide rolls out, you can tell who's been skinny dipping. - Buffet

    • @YoPhocFays
      @YoPhocFays Рік тому

      @@mattschmitt9924 yup

  • @karlabritfeld7104
    @karlabritfeld7104 Рік тому +2

    Never mind flippers, I've bought houses from people who lived in their homes for years and never bothered to maintain them. Utter garbage and the real estate agents advertised then as "immaculately maintained." Absolute lies.

  • @Caliabra
    @Caliabra Рік тому +13

    There’s this house near me that is listed at $1.3 million that’s been on the market for a month. I had some neighbors 2 months ago saying the construction for expansion was unsafe and not permitted (codes were being violated left and right). The city came out and forced him to take down the “expansion”, so he had to turn the concrete slab into “outdoor pergola area”. We went in their as nosey neighbors and the construction is awful and so is the layout. It looks like quite a bit was invested though. So now I am just laughing as week after week no one is buying. I really despise flipping…homes should be homes and not investments; also give me a home that has Ben loved and has some character

  • @collin9085
    @collin9085 Рік тому +2

    No one wants to buy into a market that is crashing. Austin has seen home prices fall 14.3% in a year. People need the confidence of stability and predictability. I wouldn't buy a stock or asset that had volatility like that.

  • @YourChicGeek
    @YourChicGeek Рік тому +1

    Ive flipped several houses and its not for the faint of heart. Sounds like there may be some are some workmanship issues with this property. The huge price reduction is a red flag unless they are trying to use that strategy to drive up the price and get multiple offers. Either way he may be better off renting it out for a while and try to refinance or something to recover some $$$.

  • @Piccolo_Re
    @Piccolo_Re Рік тому +1

    This is why you’re better being a landlord than a flipper.