I agree, it's not a move if you're still working. It's a great move, financially, if you're retiring though.The Maritimes look good, until you realize there's little work, apart from Moncton, NB is economically depressed
I still remember spending some time in NS, the concept of not being able to find full time work was so foreign to someone from Toronto
The Maritimes look good, until you realize there's little work, apart from Moncton, NB is economically depressed
I still remember spending some time in NS, the concept of not being able to find full time work was so foreign to someone from Toronto
Of course it's risky...it's an investment. If it goes well great, if it goes bad...it can go very very bad. Have seen both.I am thinking more and more my first property will be a income source not my primary residence. But my accountant friends tell me what I am planning is super risky ?
If I was buying as an investment, I would be looking hard at commercial (restaurant space maybe?). Still has some pitfalls but at least you aren't stuck with a non-paying dbag tenant for years while you fight your way through the system. Commercial evictions are fast and cheap and get you back in the market quickly.I saw townhouses in downtown Cambridge going for 560k+
So there is a upside to this mess. Crazy areas like Ainsle/downtown galt are getting more middle income folks.
You couldn't pay me to live down there still though
Also went to Milton this weekend to checkout some townhouses getting built... Meh.
I am thinking more and more my first property will be a income source not my primary residence. But my accountant friends tell me what I am planning is super risky ?
You can minimize the risk, buy a nice fully serviced building lot and put your own or somebody else's trailer on it for rental charges. Long term plan you build your house on the lot and you are investing in your capitol tax exempt primary residence. Live long and prosper.I am thinking more and more my first property will be a income source not my primary residence. But my accountant friends tell me what I am planning is super risky ?
Most municipalities have caught on to the trailer game and either don't allow it or put a hard cap on the length of time that is allowed. A way around it can be to build a big garage with a loft first. That gives you living accommodations and a dry workshop while you build the house and an awesome garage after. Either rent the loft out to hammer the mortgage or keep it as a retreat/guest suite. Figure out the plan before you start construction as there is no way in hell tenants would be getting access to my garage.You can minimize the risk, buy a nice fully serviced building lot and put your own or somebody else's trailer on it for rental charges. Long term plan you build your house on the lot and you are investing in your capitol tax exempt primary residence. Live long and prosper.
If I was buying as an investment, I would be looking hard at commercial (restaurant space maybe?). Still has some pitfalls but at least you aren't stuck with a non-paying dbag tenant for years while you fight your way through the system. Commercial evictions are fast and cheap and get you back in the market quickly.
If you don't mind putting in some money or labour, co-working offices should even out fluctuations. You can have multiple private offices rented out with a common lobby, photocopier and break room. You make money on rent, internet, printing, voip, etc. If you want to stick a receptionist in there, get virtual tenants and some more mailboxes.
One of the ways that we have been lucky enough to avoid having bad tenants is to use our realtor to find us the tenants. He does all the pre-screening and manages the showings and I meet with the final crop of successfully screened tenants to pick the one we want based on that personal interaction. We have been renting out for 10 years now and been lucky to have 2 well employed and low maintenance tenants for 5yrs each during this time. One of which we became friends with and visited his family in the villages of Uganda!If I was buying as an investment, I would be looking hard at commercial (restaurant space maybe?). Still has some pitfalls but at least you aren't stuck with a non-paying dbag tenant for years while you fight your way through the system. Commercial evictions are fast and cheap and get you back in the market quickly.
Commercial / industrial is hardball. No landlord tenant committees. No rent controls. Pay up or get out.If I was buying as an investment, I would be looking hard at commercial (restaurant space maybe?). Still has some pitfalls but at least you aren't stuck with a non-paying dbag tenant for years while you fight your way through the system. Commercial evictions are fast and cheap and get you back in the market quickly.
If you don't mind putting in some money or labour, co-working offices should even out fluctuations. You can have multiple private offices rented out with a common lobby, photocopier and break room. You make money on rent, internet, printing, voip, etc. If you want to stick a receptionist in there, get virtual tenants and some more mailboxes.
That's why you stick em in a trailer park, insure the heck out of it and forget about it when they trash it or burn it to the ground. Drag that one off to the dump and haul in a fresh rental residence lol no repairs or eviction notice required. They pay their own meter or it stops spinning.A buddy in town here has a number of rentals. Since he pays the heat the dbags sleep with the window open. Actually froze the the register to the point the water froze inside and cracked it. Pitfalls of being a landlord.
That's why you stick em in a trailer park, insure the heck out of it and forget about it when they trash it or burn it to the ground. Drag that one off to the dump and haul in a fresh rental residence lol no repairs or eviction notice required. They pay their own meter or it stops spinning.
The problem with that is finding affordable land for your trailer park (and then getting good tenants that want to live there). Mississauga had a few until recently but land value was obviously in the stratosphere and they needed water and sewer upgrades that would have cost hundreds of thousands per trailer. The trailer residents argued they were being driven out of affordable housing (true, because their housing was only artificially affordable).So you just own a bunch of trailer park spaces then rent it out like a airbnb?
A late friend ended up in an illegal trailer park near Carlyle 20 or so years ago. IIRC a farmer rented a spot to one person and then another and another until there was a small town with children and school needs. Total shambles with hydro eventually being shut down for numerous reasons. I don't know what they did with water and sewage.The problem with that is finding affordable land for your trailer park (and then getting good tenants that want to live there). Mississauga had a few until recently but land value was obviously in the stratosphere and they needed water and sewer upgrades that would have cost hundreds of thousands per trailer. The trailer residents argued they were being driven out of affordable housing (true, because their housing was only artificially affordable).
PP's idea of cabins in the woods for AirBnB is great if you can get it to work with zoning.
Isn't there one along Mississauga Rd near Belfountain? Pretty sure I saw it when riding in that area.The problem with that is finding affordable land for your trailer park (and then getting good tenants that want to live there). Mississauga had a few until recently but land value was obviously in the stratosphere and they needed water and sewer upgrades that would have cost hundreds of thousands per trailer. The trailer residents argued they were being driven out of affordable housing (true, because their housing was only artificially affordable).
PP's idea of cabins in the woods for AirBnB is great if you can get it to work with zoning.