Investors

Rents – Do the Math

It is natural to want to obtain the highest rent possible when your property is vacant. A long vacancy can cause frustration, anxiety, and anger. However, holding out for more money can be more costly than you think.

When this situation occurs, it is better to use a mathematical approach. Write down the expenditures for your investment and this can indicate to you if it is worth the risk. Consider everything it takes to support the property for one month. It can be mortgage payments, taxes, homeowner association dues, insurance, repairs, gardening, and any other expense required to maintain the unit. Even if the mortgage is low or non-existent, can it really pay for a rental price that is not attracting a tenant? If the property is in a negative position, the picture can be worse.

Example of expenditures for an investment property, determine the rent

Mortgage $845
Taxes & Insurance $145
Management Cost $70
Gardening $50
Repairs $50
Total $1,160

The above property has been on the market while occupied for thirty days and now vacant for two weeks. The asking rent is $1200, the property is in good condition, and it is in a good neighborhood but there are no applications. The Property Manager calls and requests the owner approve a rent reduction of $100 because of the competition and the slower economy. This property will cost $1160 for a month of vacancy. Already, the two-week vacancy has a loss of $580. If it is vacant for six weeks, it will be $1740; two months would be $2320

If the price lowers and the property rents within 2 weeks, the loss will only be $1160. Now that you have seen the math on this property, is it worth it to keep the higher rent if the activity is non-existent? There are no guarantees that the right tenant will apply even with the lower rent, but the odds are greater.

Apply a reverse example of this same math

The owner of the above property will not lower the rent and the property remains vacant. The rental now has been vacant for six weeks so there is already a loss of $1740.00. Prospective tenants apply but their rental record and credit is not good. This is a tempting situation but not a good one.

Although there has already been a loss, a destructive tenant can create a greater loss than that of the vacancy. Generally, a poor tenant will not pay the rent. More money is lost if attorney fees are needed to evict the tenant. This is often major damages when tenants default. The impulse is to give in and rent to the unqualified tenant to stop the rental losses. It is NOT worth the price.

The smarter choice

Lower the rent and attract the right tenant. Qualified tenants know the rental market. They will simply ignore those asking too much and rent a comparable property for less. There is still no guarantee that the property will rent but picking the wrong tenant is still the wrong choice.

It cannot hurt to try a higher rent if the market indicates properties are renting quickly. However, if the property is still vacant, it is time to think about doing the math and reducing your liability.