A clear checklist can turn “analysis paralysis” into confident action—especially on a first deal. The goal isn’t to memorize every rule of real estate; it’s to follow a repeatable sequence: set your targets, confirm financing, analyze deals the same way every time, document due diligence, and build simple systems for the first month of ownership.
Pick a single strategy for the next 6–12 months—buy-and-hold rental, house hack, or a light value-add—so decisions stay consistent and you don’t chase every shiny opportunity.
Lock in the basics: property type (single-family, small multifamily, condo), price band, target neighborhoods/ZIP codes, and minimum condition standards (for example: “no foundation issues” or “roof must have 5+ years remaining”).
Decide what “good” looks like: monthly cash flow, cash-on-cash return, equity growth, and realistic time required per week. If you can’t sustain the time commitment, the deal isn’t truly a fit.
Write a short rules list: max renovation budget, maximum commute distance, minimum rent-to-price threshold, and inspection outcomes that are non-negotiable.
Before touring properties, check credit and debt-to-income, and set a reserves target—often 3–6 months of expenses per property—so a vacancy or surprise repair doesn’t derail you.
Evaluate conventional financing, FHA/VA (if eligible), portfolio lenders, or private financing where appropriate. If you’re learning the homebuying flow, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s homeownership resources can help clarify timelines and costs: CFPB — Buying a House.
Get W-2/1099s, paystubs, bank statements, tax returns, and (if applicable) entity paperwork ready. If you plan to use an LLC, confirm lender requirements first—some loans require personal ownership or specific seasoning rules.
Include down payment, closing costs, immediate repairs, and operating reserves. This prevents the common first-timer mistake: having enough for the down payment, but not enough to stabilize the property.
| Item | What to estimate | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Gross monthly rent | Market rent from comps | Avoids overpaying based on optimistic rent |
| Operating expenses | Taxes, insurance, maintenance, capex, vacancy, management | Determines true cash flow and risk buffer |
| Financing | Rate, term, down payment, PMI, points | Changes monthly payment and cash required |
| Repairs & upgrades | Immediate safety/code items plus cosmetic scope | Prevents budget blowouts after closing |
| Reserves | 3–6 months of total expenses | Protects against vacancy and surprise repairs |
Pull comparable rent data from multiple platforms and, when possible, sanity-check with a local property manager. The goal is “defensible rent,” not best-case rent.
Vacancy, maintenance, and capital expenditures should reflect property age and condition. Older systems, older roofs, and older plumbing typically mean bigger long-term reserves.
Run a few “what if” scenarios: interest rate higher, a one-month vacancy, or a major repair like HVAC replacement. If the deal only works in perfect conditions, it isn’t stable.
Confirm seller disclosures, permits when available, HOA rules, and any lease terms for tenant-occupied properties. Verify property taxes, insurance quotes, utilities (if owner-paid), trash, HOA dues, and any city-required registrations. For rental tax basics and what counts as an expense, reference: IRS — Publication 527 (Residential Rental Property).
Bind insurance before closing and confirm you have the right coverage (landlord policy for rentals) and deductibles. Day one: change locks, secure entry points, and address immediate safety items. Create a property folder for leases, invoices, warranties, inspection reports, and a repair log. If renting, set screening criteria, publish the listing, schedule showings, and document move-in condition with photos. If you’re using FHA for a house hack, review eligibility and process details here: HUD — Let FHA Loans Help You.
Confirm realistic rent comps, total operating expenses, financing terms, repair budget, and reserves, then stress-test cash flow for vacancy or a major repair. Keep inspection and financing contingencies in place so you can renegotiate or exit if the numbers change.
Common starting targets are 3–6 months of total property expenses (mortgage, taxes, insurance, owner-paid utilities, HOA, and average maintenance). Increase that cushion for older properties, higher vacancy risk, or if you’re new to self-managing.
Yes. An agent and lender handle parts of the process, but a checklist keeps you accountable for assumptions, documentation, inspection follow-ups, vendor coordination, and setting up the first 30 days of operations.
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