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The top six mistakes you could make when buying an investment property

I owe much of my financial security to real estate property investment. Having worked in real estate my whole life (well โ€“ since I was 15, so it feels that way!) itโ€™s what I know and itโ€™s also what I love. But itโ€™s not for everyone. ย  Here are my top six mistakes you could […]
Kirsty Dunphey

I owe much of my financial security to real estate property investment. Having worked in real estate my whole life (well โ€“ since I was 15, so it feels that way!) itโ€™s what I know and itโ€™s also what I love. But itโ€™s not for everyone.

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Here are my top six mistakes you could make when buying an investment property:

1. Borrowing an amount thatโ€™s going to stress you financially to repay. This is the bottom line. Peopleโ€™s circumstances change: you could lose your job; have a child (or another child); have an extended period of vacant time; or interest rates could dramatically change. Are you prepared for that and will you still be able to (comfortably) afford your investment property?

2. Not having the appropriate insurance. I call a specific landlord protection insurance a โ€˜sleep easyโ€™ policy. While it doesnโ€™t cover you for everything, it sure covers you for a lot more than your building insurance with a tack-on landlord component and is a must โ€“ especially for owners with only one property.

3. Having a property manager who doesnโ€™t wait for the right tenants and simply puts in any old tenant. Correct tenant selection eliminates 90% of all future problems and you need a property manager who understands that.

4. Worse still โ€“ managing the property yourself. You could do your own appendectomy if you wanted to, but you wouldnโ€™t. Many privately managed properties attract worse tenants, arenโ€™t inspected regularly, the tenants arenโ€™t reference-checked, have leases which arenโ€™t up to date, and condition reports that arenโ€™t adequate.

5. Donโ€™t listen to the sales agent. With all due respect to my wonderful colleagues in the sales side of real estate โ€“ their job is to sell you the home. Confirm any rental projections of any form (projected rental price, likely tenant etc) with a specialist property manager. In the same way that I, as a property manager could tell you what your home may sell for โ€“ itโ€™d be nowhere near as accurate, reliable or researched as if you went to someone who did that job function all day every day.

6. Buying a property and becoming a property investor if youโ€™re not mentally prepared for it. I have clients right now who know theyโ€™re not made for being property investors. Theyโ€™ll sell their homes when the market is right for them and never look back with a momentโ€™s regret. A property investor has to be able to have a good level of emotional distance from their investments. Own a property long enough and you will have tenants who do not respect your investment. Own a property long enough and youโ€™ll have (even with great tenants) damage done to your investment. There will be times when the gardens arenโ€™t done perfectly or the internal presentation isnโ€™t up to scratch (isnโ€™t it this way at your home at times, too?) and if you drive past your investment property all the time you will see these occurrences.

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From broke at 19 to retired at 27, Kirsty Dunphey is an entrepreneur, mother and author, and lives by the motto Memento Vivere (remember to live).