Tips on How To Buy Investment Real Estate in Destin Florida

The plan for many people is to buy an investment property at the beach in Destin Florida.  And what a great plan it is:

  • You get to buy in at the low ebb in the real estate cycle. Remember buy low sell high.
  • You get a place at the beach in Destin that you can use up to two weeks a year to do repairs and general maintenance while still getting all the tax deductions
  • You get to take advantage of the increasing rental income that is expected in the area.   Positive cash flow is a good thing.

Be careful though because it’s not always as easy as it looks and you will need access to good advice and perspective.

Here is a good start – it’s an article I found at MarketWatch.com that talks about How to buy …investment real estate.

Various strategies can be used on the road to real estate wealth. In one, investors “flip” properties by buying a house, renovating it in short order and selling for a profit. In another, investors purchase the property with the intent to hold it for many years.

Good luck and for help with your plan to buy an investment property at the beach in Destin Florida give us a call at 850-217-7618 and we will be happy to help.  You can also start your search by clicking the button below.

 

How To Keep Renters From Running Up Your AC Bill!

850-654-3325

151 Regions Way Ste. 4A

Destin, FL 32541


 


 


 

How To Keep Renters From Running Up Your AC Bill!



Renters don’t pay the AC bill so they will leave patio doors wide open and turn the AC way down costing you a ton of money and wasting energy.

What if you could……

How To Renovate A Condo At The Beach

One of our clients recently bought a gulf front condo at the beach in Destin Florida.  They bought it as an investment property and decided to renovate right away so that they could be ready to maximize the high summer rental season bookings.  It worked out great and they could not be happier.  Kris Moran, our Buyer’s Agent wrote a blog about the renovation project which offers great tips on how to renovate a condo at the beach.

Here at the beach I sell mostly investment properties – and mostly condos.  I absolutely love selling condos – it is easy to sell what you love and believe in!  I was lucky to meet “Mr. and Mrs. C” and spend a day of their spring break showing them condos in April.   And less than a month later, they are now the owners of a stunning 3 bedroom Gulf front condo.  And they had well over $10,000 booked in rentals before they even closed!  The condo was great when they bought it, but Mrs.  C spent 3 short days after the closing updating it with her own personal touches and next thing you know, she worked her magic and turned the condo into something truly special.  Her ideas are inspiring.  Check out the rest of the story A Beach Condo Before and After.

 

Real Estate Conditions Have Never Been Better

Check out this article posted on the Floridarealtors.org  website quoting former National Association of Realtor’s President Moe Veissi – who explains why if you are thinking of buying a home or condo real estate conditions have never been better.  Veissi, broker-owner of Veissi & Associates Inc. in Miami, says today’s real estate market has “less folks looking, less inventory and more contracts working. … We’re just now seeing appreciation in real estate prices in some areas of the country. … This is a wonderful time to take advantage of interest rates that are lower than they’ve ever been.”

Click the link to read the entire Real Estate Today Article.  Destin Florida is the place to buy the perfect condo or home.  Check out what is on the market and get ready to buy, buy, buy!  We want to be your real estate source at the beach.  Call us today real estate conditions have never been better.

 

Rental Property Investment Tips

 

Keller Williams Realty’s At The Beach Team are experts in listing and selling rental property investment condos and homes.  North Florida has so much to offer the rental property investment home buyer.  Let us help you invest your hard earn money on the perfect place at the beach and get a fantastic return on your money!  The article below posted on the Fox News.com –  Rental Property Investing 101 – tips for future property moguls provides great tips on how to invest in real estate.   Check it out!

 

The media and real estate professionals continually report that 2012 is the year to buy real estate. Since home values have dropped considerably, the U.S. median list price has dropped considerably, too. Couple that with interest rates that are the lowest they’ve ever been and it’s a perfect storm of real estate buying opportunity, especially for starting out your career as a landlord.  Click the link to read the entire Philly Tablet Business News Article.

Click the link to read the entire article on Rental Property Investing 1010-tips and future property moguls.

 

More Investors Are Buying At The Shore

 

 

Check out this article from the Philly Tablet Business section that talks about how Investors are buying at  the shore.  North Florida is the place to invest in!  A hidden jewel of beautiful resort style condominiums that smart investors are picking up for pennies on the dollar.

The term investor needs to be defined, though, just to be clear about what is happening.

“Investor can mean someone who is buying strictly to rent the property out as much as possible for as many years as they plan on owning it, then ultimately selling the place for an expected long-term capital gain at some point down the road,” Leiser said. “We are also seeing buyers who plan to rent their new property for only a portion of each summer and then use it themselves for the rest of the time. Or their plan could be to rent their new place for only a summer or two, before they convert it to personal use.”

Buyers see the current market as an opportunity to possibly “move up” — for example, to a beach block as opposed to a mid-island property — by taking advantage now of lower asking prices, as well as the ability to rent the house out for a while to help them carry the higher price of the more desirable location

Click the link to read the entire Philly Tablet Business News Article.

5 Tips For Investing In Rental Property

Here are five great tips for investing in rental property.  This artical from MSN Real Estate talks about how to get started in buying rental property.  Some of the things you will learn about investing in rental property are:  Lessons for landlords, finding rental properties in your area, finding expirenced investor partners, finding the right location.

 

What’s more, the real-estate market is starting to recover: U.S. houses lost $489 billion in value during the first 11 months of 2009, but that was significantly lower than the $3.6 trillion lost during 2008, according to real-estate website Zillow.com.

Read this article on investing in rental property

 

Grayton’s One and Only RED BAR

A favorite among locals and visitors, Picolos – The Red Bar is a must-do when in Gratyon Beach!!


The Red Bar is the areas most popular indoor destination.  Its the place for fun with friends and family while taking in all of the eclectic decor, listening to the great live Jazz Music and enjoying great food and cocktails.

The simple but varied menu includes pasta with crawfish and shrimp, panne chicken and mashed potatoes, stuffed eggplant, crab cakes and fish of the day.  Oh, and dont forget about the salad — it is the best anywhere on the Emerald Coast!

The Red Bar Jazz Band plays almost nightly.  And when they’re not rocking the stage, Walton County’s Dread Clampitt boys brings down the house!  The party gets cranked up a notch after the dinner crowd thins creating a more funky atmosphere.  Dont be surprised to spot celebrities here late at night.  But please, everybody just wants to chill at The Red Bar.

Located in Grayton Beach, Florida — The Red Bar is just a short drive from Destin & Panama City Beach.  Housed in the old General Store at 70 Hotz Avenue – Downtown Grayton Beach, FL.

Tapping Retirement Funds Now

Piggy Bank

Six reasons to tap retirement funds now to buy rental property

Here is more information about investing and Grayton Beach Real Estate. As always I think it’s very important to be as informed as possible on how to maximize your investing power.  So with that in mind I found this article about using IRA’s to buy real estate at Market Watch.com. Take a look and let me know what you think.

Using IRAs to buy real estate

Six reasons to tap retirement funds now to buy rental property

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — One of today’s soundest investments is never touted in financial-services ads. The reason: Wall Street wouldn’t make any money off it.

Since 1974, Americans have had the ability to use IRA assets to buy investment property. Yet the means to do that — called a self-directed IRA — remains one of the least known and unheralded investment vehicles in the vast financial marketplace.

With foreclosed homes selling at dimes on the dollar, residential real estate is a bargain for investors holding cash. And if they can put 30% down, IRA investors will find specialty lenders eager to help them leverage their retirement savings with mortgages on rental properties.

The U.S. housing market may not yet have hit bottom, but the winds appear to be shifting. Existing-home sales are on the mend in hardest-hit markets and foreclosure-avoidance programs are expected to stem the rising inventory of bank repossessions, meaning the window to buy at rock-bottom prices could close before the year is out.

Bear in mind homes purchased with IRA funds can’t be used for personal purposes. Doing so risks the IRS declaring the assets withdrawn and demanding immediate payment of income taxes and penalties on the entire account value.

Still, as an investment readily understood by anyone who’s been through the home buying and selling process, purchasing a steeply discounted property that can produce annual income of 10% and more is a low-risk strategy for uncertain times — especially for retirees whose fixed-income investments are paying paltry yields right now. Read more on setting up a managing a self-directed IRA.

Here are six reasons why buying real estate with an IRA is a potentially lucrative and wise move today:

1. A solid alternative to stocks

When economies teeter, investors often run to hard assets such as gold — humankind’s historic “store of value.” Yet gold’s value is measured not only in ounces but also in the intangible fear that surrounds its price spikes.

When it comes to hard assets, there’s perhaps no greater shared sense of value from Mongolia to Montana than for land and a dwelling. And in U.S. history, there’s never been such a fire sale on our housing stock.

The Great Depression exacted a heavy toll on home values, but there was nowhere near the inventory flooding the… housing market as in the past year. The reason: A collapse in home prices, not stocks, triggered this meltdown.

Of course, some would say foreclosed-home buyers capitalize on others’ misfortune. But the sooner we clear the massive, nationwide inventory of unsold homes — which many economists argue is a key to recovery — the better off we’ll all be.

2. An investment well-suited for long-term investors

Even in the best of times, the stock market looks out six months to a year. Right now, even seasoned pros can’t feel the bottom of the muck we’re in.

Many retirement savers are uncomfortable with their nest egg tied up largely in stocks. That’s just the direction where the system of IRAs and 401(k)s — which also advances Wall Street’s interests — shepherds them.

Real-estate cycles generally run in decade-or-so swings and this one may not yet have neared its bottom. Housing values could drop another 10% to 20%, but the stock market also could drop further and take a decade to well surpass its previous highs.

Especially for those in or near retirement, buying a property that produces rental income that’s likely to increase with inflation is as sound a long-term investment as any TV commentator or investing guru might offer.

3. Purchasing a significantly undervalued asset

For investors willing to hang on to a property for five years or more, residential real estate today presents a tremendous opportunity to do just what investors ideally do — buy low and sell high.  In some of the hardest-hit regional markets nationwide, homes are selling for as little as 20% of their value in 2006. In the San Francisco Bay Area, for instance, a 3,400-square-foot, five-bedroom, three-bath house built in 2000 recently listed for $257,000 — after last selling for $795,000 just three years ago.

More importantly, at a cost of just $75 per-square-foot, that’s about a third of the new construction cost for a well-outfitted, single-family home in that region. An IRA buyer in that case would get a relatively new house that would require little maintenance — and a 7,000-square-foot lot essentially thrown in for free.

While that may be an extreme example, countless thousands of existing homes nationwide are selling for 50% of today’s construction and land costs. Putting aside previous overinflated values, that statistic illustrates how inexpensive home prices have become — and how much upside they offer in terms of appreciation when the real-estate market finally recovers.

4. A steady income generator

At a time when companies are slashing stock dividends at record rates, retirees can’t be assured of that income source. And with government bonds paying a pittance in terms of yield, that fixed-income stream is running mighty shallow.

Income from a rental property bought with a self-directed IRA flows back into the retirement account. The IRA holds title to the property and the income it produces can be directed into all manner of investments typically held within an IRA, be it stocks, bonds, mutual funds or money market accounts.

On a percentage basis, that income can be two to three times higher than today’s fixed-income offerings even after paying expenses such as property taxes and insurance. Meanwhile, the accountholder can eventually reap the potential appreciation of the underlying asset — the property — that the IRA owns.

For retirement savers needing to fund a child’s college costs, a rental property held in an IRA also can be a valuable source of funds. While money taken out of a traditional IRA is subject to income taxes, it doesn’t face early-withdrawal penalties if used for higher-education costs. And while financial advisers caution against using retirement funds to pay for college costs, the IRA owner still has upside potential on the property to count on and the income in years ahead.

5. A safer means to play the stock market

For those who don’t want to abandon potential stock-market returns, a rental home owned in an IRA still affords them the ability to invest in stocks.

Rental income funneled into stocks or stock mutual funds today will be buying shares at sharply reduced prices. Directing the proceeds of each monthly rent check into stocks or mutual-fund shares accomplishes the same “dollar-cost averaging” strategy that occurs when employees steer a fixed amount of every paycheck into their 401(k).

Over a 10- to 20-year period, the return that the rental income produces if plowed into stocks is rich icing on the cake, coming on top of the return provided by the rental income itself.

6. The ability to flip real estate with no tax bite

Proceeds from selling an IRA-owned home roll back into the IRA without facing capital-gains taxes. To the contrary, an investor who buys and resells a property within a year with nonretirement funds faces a capital-gains levy.

Many foreclosed homes today are “distressed,” vandalized by angry departing owners who may have deferred maintenance due to tough times. They often ransack anything and everything not nailed down and many things that are, from lighting fixtures and kitchen appliances to furnaces and central-air conditioners, toilets and bathroom vanities.

Such properties — which can be found at most all price points — are among the cheapest on the market on a per-square-foot basis because the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) and most private mortgage lenders won’t loan on homes deemed “uninhabitable.” That drastically reduces the potential buyer pool to just cash purchasers — and reduces the property values as a result.

Even homes needing only cosmetic fixes sell at a discount today because there are countless others available in move-in condition. If an IRA home buyer has enough in the account post-purchase to refit a home’s interior — whether it’s laying carpet and laminate flooring or upgrading a kitchen or bathroom — going the minor-rehab route can be a rewarding approach.

Buyers might choose to fix up the cheapest, distressed property in a solid neighborhood so it qualifies for a mortgage and then resell it. They also could improve upon it over several years with the rental income. Either way, it’s a potentially enriching value-add strategy.

The ultimate choice

The bottom line with buying rental properties with an IRA is that the investor retains a level of control over a tangible asset that he or she could never remotely attain in owning shares of a company or a mutual fund.

The question that bears asking: What will yield a better return in the next five to 10 years — shares of Microsoft, General Electric or Citigroup, or a modest rental home in a decent school district — selling for 30 cents on the dollar — whose value may soon be juiced by record-low mortgage rates and unprecedented tax breaks?

Chris Pummer is a former senior editor for MarketWatch and Bloomberg News and a reporter for such papers as the Los Angeles Times and San Jose Mercury News.

Click on the links to find Grayton Beach ForeclosuresGrayton Beach Short SalesGrayton Beach Homes For Sale,  Grayton Beach Condos For Sale

Also check out The Destin Real Estate News, 30A Real Estate NewsPanama City Beach Real Estate News, Destin Condo News.

Land Sold in 2009

Looking back on the 2nd Quarter I can tell you that sale’s no change in Grayton Beach so let’s take a closer look at what sold and what is currently for sale.

Grayton Beach Land Sales – Second Quarter, 2009

Total Number of Grayton Beach Land Sold: 1
Highest Price for a Grayton Beach Land Sold: $685,000
Lowest Price for a Grayton Beach Land Sold: $685,000
Average Price for a Grayton Beach Land Sold: $685,000
Average Price Per Sq. Ft. for a Grayton Beach Land Sold: 341
Average Days On Market for a Grayton Beach Land Sold: 134

There you go- these sold numbers give you a pretty good idea of what buyers are willing to pay in the current market now let’s take a look at what sellers are asking this month.
Grayton Beach Land For Sale

Ok let’s take a look at what is currently for sale in Grayton Beach.

Total Number of Grayton Beach Land For Sale: 18
Highest List Price for a Grayton Beach Land For Sale: $5,390,000
Lowest List Price for a Grayton Beach Land For Sale: $399,000
Average List Price for a Grayton Beach Land For Sale: $2,114,633
Average Price Per Sq. Ft. for a Grayton Beach Land For Sale: $646
Average Number of Days On Market for a Grayton Beach Land For Sale: 443
Total Number of Grayton Beach Land Foreclosures and Shorts Sales: 1

As you can see it’s a great time to be a buyer of Grayton Beach Land For Sale and you can easily search all of them on the At The Beach website. You can also sign up for the Grayton Beach Foreclosures and Short Sale Alert and receive an email every time a new property comes up as a Foreclosure or Short Sale.