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A self-made millionaire who 'hates real estate' shares the investment strategy he used to get in without having to manage property

brennan Schlagbaum
Brennan Schlagbaum quit his CPA job in 2021 to run his business, Budgetdog, full-time.

Courtesy of Brennan Schlagbaum

  • Brennan Schlagbaum has zero interest in managing properties but wants exposure to real estate.
  • His solution is to invest in real estate syndications, which are completely hands-off.
  • This is when a group of investors pool capital to purchase a single investment.

Brennan Schlagbaum recognizes the advantages of real estate β€” from the tax benefits to portfolio diversification β€” but he's not willing to buy and manage an investment property.

He says he has his hands full with simply maintaining a primary residence: "I hate real estate with a passion. If something breaks in my house, I call somebody."

To benefit from real estate without having to actually own and operate properties, he invests in real estate syndications.

"I think it's one of the best ways for somebody that hates real estate but understands the tax benefits of real estate to get in because you don't have to do anything," the self-made millionaire and founder of Budgetdog, who built his wealth primarily investing in low-cost index funds, told Business Insider.

How real-estate syndications work

In real-estate syndication deals, a group of investors pools together their capital to purchase a single property managed by the syndicator.

Once the investor contributes capital, their role in the deal becomes completely passive. The real-estate syndicator is responsible for finding the deal, executing the transaction, and, ultimately, delivering returns to the investors.

"You lose control from that aspect. You don't really have control over how that performs," said Schlagbaum, who said he invests in five multi-family syndications. But if you work with a syndicator with a good track record that you trust, "it's essentially an index fund."

He invests with a syndicator that specializes in multi-family properties.

"They go in, upgrade the units, increase rent prices in a really high-demand area that's underpriced, own and operate that building for a couple of years, and then typically sell it after a three- to five-year period, sometimes up to seven," he explained. "And you don't do anything as an investor; you're just an equity partner. So you literally send some capital their way and hope they do their job."

A good option for established investors looking for hands-off strategies

BI has spoken to a variety of established investors who, after building wealth by acquiring rental properties, are turning to syndication deals for a more passive experience.

"You hear that real-estate investing is passive, and that's certainly not been my experience," said self-made millionaire Tess Waresmith, who owns five units across three properties. "I still think it's a wonderful way to invest, but it's not passive like investing in the stock market is."

She invested in her first syndication in 2023 and likes that it opens the door to bigger investment opportunities.

"I check out the deal and make sure it's something that feels good to me, and then when I invest the money, I'm hands-off. I'm not involved in the day-to-day decision-making of the property," she said. "But as an investor, I get to benefit from investing in the larger unit properties."

Carl and Mindy Jensen, a financially independent couple who have started shifting toward passive-investing strategies, including real estate syndication, also appreciate the hands-off nature of these deals. But it's hard to know what your returns will look like, Carl told BI: "The people running these syndications will tell you they're expecting numbers, and it's infrequently accurate."

It's important to remember that the syndicator is "probably using their best, sunny-day scenarios." That said, "every syndication we've had has actually outperformed the original numbers."

To participate in this type of partnership, you typically have to be an accredited investor, meaning you either must have a net worth of over $1 million or an income of over $200,000 (individually) over the past two years. There's also typically a minimum investment requirement, depending on the syndicator.

But there are workarounds, said Schlagbaum, especially if you're part of a real-estate community or network.

Investors who are part of the community he's built, for example, don't necessarily have to be accredited to participate, since "the SEC deems pre-existing relationships allowable," he said. "They just get access to the deal because they know me."

Sometimes, "Getting around those hurdles is just knowing the right people."

Read the original article on Business Insider

A financially independent real-estate investor who acquired 5 new units in 5 months explains how he sources deals and his go-to wealth-building strategy

ludomir wanot
Ludomir Wanot is a Seattle-based real estate investor and entrepreneur.

Courtest of Ludomir Wanot

  • Real estate investor Ludomir Wanot shares strategies anyone can use to find deals.
  • He doesn't expect rates to drop in 2025 and encourages investors to lean into creative financing.
  • Strategies such as subject-to financing can help investors avoid excessive borrowing costs.

Real-estate investor Ludomir Wanot wants other investors to know that there are deals to be found β€” you just have to know where to look.

"I love rentals. I love to see the physical, tangible assets," the Seattle-based millennial, who built his wealth wholesaling and now runs an AI company that helps lenders communicate with their clients, told Business Insider. "The proven, consistent strategy that's worked for me over the last seven years is sticking with the rental strategy of buying at a 30% discount to appraised value, making sure it cash flows at least $500 a month, and the property has to be in an opportunity zone β€” and I find these properties all the time."

He's acquired five units in Oregon in the last five months, which BI verified by looking at settlement statements.

"They're definitely out there," he said. "But sometimes they're not in Washington. Sometimes you have to look outside the state."

Wanot shared strategies that any investor can use to find deals, what types of properties he's looking for and what he's avoiding, and the simplest way for anyone to break into real estate investing in 2025.

Source off-market deals through wholesalers

One strategy for finding deals is to look for off-market properties β€” meaning, properties for sale that are not listed on the multiple listing service. While more difficult to find, they're typically easier to negotiate thanks to less competition.

There are various ways to find off-market properties, from real-estate auction websites to Craigslist to door-knocking. There's also wholesaling, which is when the person acting as the wholesaler finds and buys a discounted property and then sells the contract to another buyer.

Having done wholesaling for years, Wanot is aware that "there are wholesalers that consistently find discounted properties, and you can find those people on Facebook, through investment communities, they're all over."

He encourages investors to meet with wholesalers in their area and provide them with specific property criteria. If you're new to investing and haven't yet built a network, start by attending real-estate meet-ups or joining online real-estate communities.

As Wanot has learned, "Surround yourself with people who know more than you, ask questions, and build relationships with all different kinds of people you meet because you never know when you can work with them down the road."

Maximize cash flow with creative financing

Wanot doesn't expect rates to drop significantly in 2025. To get a property to generate positive cash flow in a higher-rate environment, he recommends leaning into creative financing.

"With interest rates remaining high, traditional financing methods may not yield the best returns," he said, but strategies such as seller financing, subject-to agreements, and private lending could help investors lock in better terms and avoid excessive borrowing costs.

ludomir wanot
Wanot and his fiancΓ© reside in Seattle.

Courtesy of Ludomir Wanot

Seller financing is when the buyer buys directly from the seller. The seller acts as the lender and provides a loan with agreed-upon terms about things like the interest rate and schedule of payments.

With subject-to financing, the buyer takes over the existing financing. The buyer doesn't actually assume the mortgage β€” it remains in the seller's name with the same terms β€” but will make mortgage payments on behalf of the seller.

Private money lending is another way to avoid a bank or traditional mortgage lender, and can be a "great way to avoid high interest rates and fees," said Wanot, adding: "I've had a lot of luck sourcing private money lenders through real estate Facebook groups."

Look for single-family homes that need work

"If you're a new investor, I'd definitely go after the distressed, small single-family homes," said Wanot.

Another tip is to look for property where the seller has "at least 50% equity in the home and has owned it for a long time," he said, as they might be more motivated to negotiate, especially if they're managing it from out-of-state. "I'm looking at owners who are over the age of 50 because the older owners tend to want to get out of the real estate space. It is so draining and requires a lot of physical and mental work."

Wanot owns multi-family properties but has found that they're more difficult to make the numbers work, at least in his current market.

"If you're a sophisticated investor, yes, small or large multi-families are good if you actually have run your numbers 1,000 times and you know exactly what you're looking for," he said. "There have been probably five properties that I was going to buy in the last year that I didn't pull the trigger on because the profit and loss statements that were given to me were significantly different from the actual bank statements."

A common mistake he's seen investors make, especially when it comes to these big multi-families, is just paying attention to the P&Ls, "which are made by the property managers or the owners of the property and show one story," he said. "They're not actually going through the bank statements and seeing what actual revenue is coming in and what expenses are going out."

He also advises avoiding the BRRRR β€” buy, rehab, rent, refinance, and repeat β€” method in a high-rate environment: "It hasn't really been working the last couple of years because the interest rates are so high right now, and so smart investors are moving away from that."

The easiest way to get started: Rent a portion of your home

For most new investors, the simplest and most risk-averse way to get started is "creating rentable units in their single-family home space," said Wanot, referring to a strategy known as "house hacking."

This requires owning a primary residence and converting a garage, basement, or even a bedroom into a rentable space. If you have a bigger budget and meet zoning requirements in your area, another option may be to build an ADU.

At a minimum, renting out a portion of your home will reduce your mortgage β€” and could even fully cover it. Lowering your monthly housing payment could then help you save up to buy a proper investment property.

Wanot's top advice heading into the new year, however, is to actually implement what you read about and learn. Taking action could be as small as joining a real estate community and networking.

"People are buying programs, they're going to the events, they're watching people come up onstage and talk about how wealthy they got through a particular strategy. But very few people actually implement anything they're being taught," he said.

"The day we actually stop listening to and reading all these stories, podcasts, and YouTube videos and actually apply ourselves is the day we're finally going to start seeing progress in our lives."

Read the original article on Business Insider

A real estate investor who bought a property in 2023 for $100,000 less than the listing price shares his top strategy for finding motivated sellers

dion mcneeley
Dion McNeeley in front of the fourth investment property he acquired.

Courtesy of Dion McNeeley

  • To find deals, Dion McNeeley focuses on how many days a property has been on the market.
  • The investor targets properties that have been listed for at least three times the average.
  • The 'days on market' strategy helped him negotiate a seller down by $100,000.

Real-estate investor Dion McNeeley used to prioritize speed when making an offer.

"The first 10 years of investing, I wanted to be fast. I wanted to get an offer in within a day or two of a property hitting the MLS," the veteran investor told Business Insider, referring to the multiple listing service.

Now, with a 16-unit portfolio that generates enough cash flow to more than cover his lifestyle, McNeeley is less focused on acquiring properties quickly and more concerned with finding the best deal. To do so, he's paying attention to one specific metric: the number of days a property has been on the market.

Generally speaking, the longer a home has been on the market, the more motivated the seller will be. "Long" is relative to the average time a home sits on the market, which varies by location. In some areas, the average could be 10; in others, it could be 30.

McNeeley, who studies his market in Tacoma, Washington by looking at listings daily, knows that the average home sits for six to nine days, at least in December of 2024.

His rule of thumb is to take the average and triple it. That's the number you're looking for when looking at listings. In his case, he rounded up the average to 10 and is looking specifically for homes that have been listed for at least 30 days.

When he comes across a property he likes that meets his days-on-market criteria, he makes an offer that will get him the return he's looking for.

For example, the latest property he purchased β€” a duplex that needed a lot of work done β€” had been on the market for over 100 days. It was listed for $500,000, but based on the renovations McNeeley would need to complete, he calculated that the deal would only work if he could buy it for significantly less. BI verified all of his property ownership claims.

"I offered 400,000 because that's the number that made sense for me," McNeeley said. His offer initiated a two-month negotiation. "I never moved from 400. It went from 500 to 477 to 444 to 422. When I got another offer accepted somewhere else, I contacted them to say I was pulling my offer. They said, 'We'll take your 400.'"

If you're going after a home that's been on the market for longer than average, there may be something wrong with it, and it's important to do your due diligence. Or, it could simply be listed poorly.

"Maybe the agent was lazy and took bad pictures or doesn't have it listed correctly," said McNeeley.

In his case, it was a bit of both: The property, which he purchased in July 2023, ended up needing $62,000 worth of renovations, which he was prepared for, and it wasn't what it appeared on the listing. It was listed as a single-family home but was actually a duplex, which he found out by calling the gas and utility companies and asking how many meters there were.

"It had two meters for electric and two meters for gas. Everything about this was duplex, but the picture looked like a house, and the realtor listed it as a house," he said.

Talking to the gas company, he learned that the gas hadn't been paid in months and had been shut off, further indicating that he could be working with a motivated seller.

"That's one of the reasons when I offered 400,000, I didn't raise the number," he said, figuring, "If the seller has to sell, they'll take my number. If they don't have to sell, they'll just leave it listed, or they'll take it down and not sell. So, you're not always guaranteed to get a low offer accepted. Sometimes people don't have to sell β€” they are just willing to for a higher amount."

Read the original article on Business Insider

A financially independent real estate investor explains the 'live-in BRRRR' strategy he's using to eventually sidestep capital gains and shield up to $250,000 in profit from tax

dion mcneeley
Dion McNeeley owns 16 units across seven properties in Washington.

Courtesy of Dion McNeeley

  • Dion McNeeley used a buy-and-hold strategy to build a 16-unit rental portfolio.
  • He experimented with the BRRRR method by purchasing and renovating a duplex in 2023.
  • He could eventually sell the property and leverage an IRS rule to avoid capital gains tax.

Dion McNeeley spent over a decade carefully building a portfolio of rental properties throughout Washington State.

"I've never sold a property. I've never done a cash-out refinance. I've never taken out a home equity line of credit," he told Business Insider. "I'm the slow, boring investor: Save up a down payment, buy the next place; save up a down payment, buy the next place."

His buy-and-hold strategy allowed him to quit his day job in 2022 and retire in his early 50s. He had enough rental income coming in from his 16-unit portfolio to sustain his lifestyle and then some.

In 2023, he decided to experiment with the BRRRR β€” short for buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat β€” method and purchased a beat-up duplex outside Seattle.

"I don't think people should start investing with the BRRRR strategy. There are so many mistakes that you can make with the after-repair value, the estimated cost, and the estimated time of doing repairs," said McNeeley, who scaled his portfolio by "house hacking," a strategy that involves buying a multi-family property, living in one unit, and renting out the rest. "I didn't do any BRRRRs to reach financial freedom and retire early."

The early retiree shared his experience doing a "live-in BRRRR" β€” he lived in the duplex while doing renovations β€” including how he found the property and added value, and the strategy he could eventually use to sell and sidestep capital gains tax.

Finding a deal by focusing on 'days on market'

The first step to successfully executing a BRRRR is finding a distressed property with potential.

Real estate investors tend to agree that you make your money on the purchase β€” not on the sale. To land a good deal in 2023, McNeeley focused on one specific metric when combing through listings: the number of days a property has been on the market.

"I'm watching what are called 'days on market,'" he said. Generally speaking, the longer a home has been sitting, the better chance you have of negotiating a deal with the seller. "Long" is relative to the average days on market, which varies by location. "In some, it's 10; in others, it's 30."

In his area in Washington, he said the average is between six and nine days. He narrowed his search to properties that were listed for at least three times the average, or about 30 days.

The duplex he ended up buying had been on the market for over 100 days and was listed for $500,000.

"I offered 400,000 because that's the number that made sense for me," said McNeeley. After about two months of negotiating, he got it for the number he wanted. "I never moved from 400. It went from 500 to 477 to 444 to 422. When I got another offer accepted somewhere else, I contacted them to say I was pulling my offer. They said, 'We'll take your 400.'"

Putting $62,000 worth of renovations into the property

When McNeeley bought the duplex, one of the units was "completely destroyed," he said. "It needed drywall, plumbing, electric. It wasn't livable."

The unit he moved into wasn't much better. It was "close to not livable," he described.

He said he spent $62,000 and 10 months renovating. In May 2024, a tenant moved into the second unit.

"With the appreciation of the last year and the other unit being rented, the property is worth about $700,000, so I've made close to $300,000 in profit," said McNeeley, who bought the house in cash.

Avoiding financing was important to him.

"One of the biggest problems with the BRRRR method is the funding source," he said. "For the 'repair' part of BRRRR, a lot of people borrow hard money because they want to buy a property that you can't get traditional lending on. That hard money will have a higher interest rate β€” and usually within six months or a year the interest rate goes up a lot, so you want to get the repairs done and get it rented out within that six months or a year, whatever your timeline is, and then refinance to a traditional mortgage."

He bought in cash to avoid the time crunch.

The price of doing a 'live-in BRRRR': Living in a construction zone

The 'live-in BRRRR' has been lucrative for McNeeley. When he started the project, he moved out of the unit of one of his properties β€” a fourplex β€” and filled it with a tenant. Now that all four units are rented, the property is "almost making $4,000 a month without me living there," McNeeley said.

He moved into the duplex, which he purchased in cash, so he doesn't have a mortgage. He pays taxes and insurance, but the unit he fixed up rents for $2,125 a month and more than covers his expenses, "so I'm being paid to live where I'm at," he said.

The major tradeoff was living in a construction zone and without a kitchen and bathroom for months during the renovation

"I would literally go to the state park up the street to take showers. It was almost like camping for two months," said McNeeley. "I was willing to do some things that people aren't."

What's next? A cash-out refi or selling and avoiding up to $250,000 in capital gains tax

Now that the rehab is complete, the next step of the BRRRR method would be to refinance.

"I could do a cash-out refinance and get my money back because I've added the value to the property," he said. "I could take $500,000 or $600,000 out and go buy another rental and increase my cash flow. That's a good outcome."

Or, he could divert from the BRRRR and sell the property. This option intrigues him because of the Section 121 Exclusion, an IRS rule that lets taxpayers exclude up to $250,000 of the gain from the sale.

The main requirement is that you must use the home as your main residence for at least two of the five years preceding the sale, which McNeeley will satisfy in July 2025. If you're selling a vacation home, for example, you can't use the exclusion. You can also only use the exclusion every two years.

"I could sell it, make a couple hundred thousand dollars in profit, and not have to pay a penny in taxes β€” and either go and repeat the process somewhere else or go buy something with the gains and have a bigger, nicer place," he said, adding that he likely won't do another live-in BRRRR because of the rougher living conditions.

"I probably won't know until July when I have an appraisal done on if I'm going to do a cash-out refinance or I'm going to sell the place," he said. "It's really hard to make a decision when both outcomes are positive."

Read the original article on Business Insider

A couple in their 30s who hit a seven-figure net worth primarily by investing in Vanguard index funds explain why they shifted to ETFs in 2024

brennan erin Schlagbaum
Brennan and Erin Schlagbaum reside in Texas. They have two daughters.

Courtesy of Brennan and Erin Schlagbaum

  • Brennan and Erin Schlagbaum switched from index funds to ETFs in October 2024.
  • Vanguard's new automatic ETF investing prompted the conversion.
  • The ETFs they switched to have a slightly lower expense ratio and may be more tax-efficient.

Brennan and Erin Schlagbaum built a seven-figure net worth by investing primarily in three Vanguard index funds.

For years, more than 95% of their stock-market money was in the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund (VTSAX), the Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund (VTIAX), and the Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock Index Fund (VEMAX).

In October 2024, the millennial couple said they moved 100% of their index funds to ETFs within all of their accounts in response to Vanguard rolling out automatic ETF investing, allowing investors to schedule recurring investments. Previously, Vanguard investors could not make automatic investments into or out of ETFs.

ETFs and index funds are similar β€” in fact, most ETFs are index funds β€” and can offer long-term returns, diversification, and cost savings thanks to low expense ratios. One key difference is how they're traded: ETFs can be bought and sold throughout the trading day, while index funds can only be bought and sold once a day at the close of the trading day. ETFs also typically require a lower investment minimum. You can buy a Vanguard ETF for as little as $1, for example, whereas most Vanguard mutual funds have a $3,000 minimum.

It made sense for the Schlagbaums to switch to ETFs for two main reasons.

"The first is, the expense ratios on the actual funds themselves are slightly cheaper, so there's a savings there," Brennan told Business Insider, noting that it's a very small difference.

Secondly, ETFs may offer tax savings when compared to index funds. ETF investors are taxed only when they sell the investment, while investors who own mutual funds β€” and index funds qualify as mutual funds β€” are liable for paying some capital gains taxes when a fund sells assets and realizes a gain.

"Given the nature of an index fund, this doesn't really occur much," noted Schlagbaum. "However, it can, and I'd like to eliminate it entirely if I had the choice."

As for the actual conversion from index funds to ETFs, Schlagbaum's experience was "super easy," he said. "You can call Vanguard directly, and they can do it over the phone, or you can just go in the platform, and all you do is swap the funds for the same exact ETF. For example, our biggest holding β€” VTSAX β€” the equivalent ETF is VTI."

The equivalent of their VTIAX holding is VXUS, and the equivalent of their VEMAX holding is VWO.

Notably, the conversion did not trigger a taxable event, he added: "Typically, if you're in a taxable brokerage account and sold out VTSAX, you'd have to pay capital gains on that move. But because Vanguard rolled out fractional ETF shares as part of their roll-out, they basically shielded all taxes from any investors that make this move."

Just because he's putting his money into ETFs doesn't mean his strategy is shifting. Schlagbaum is still playing the long-term, buy-and-hold game β€” and he's not dismissing low-cost index-funds, by any means.

"If you stay in index funds, it's not going to make or break you long-term," he said. The way he sees it, the ETFs he converted to are very similar in terms of their holdings, just slightly more tax-efficient.

It's difficult to quantify how much the move could save him in the future.

He said the difference in the expense ratio is "super minor." VTSAX, for example, has an expense ratio of 0.04%, while its equivalent ETF, VTI, has one of 0.03%.

As for the capital gains aspect, "that's very dependent year-to-year based on the manager that's holding that fund and how they buy and sell and the transaction activity within that fund, so it's impossible to calculate that."

If he had to estimate, "Long term, I would say it's probably a six-figure move, which isn't that big over a 30- to 40-year period. But, it's like, why wouldn't you take it? It's low-hanging fruit in my opinion."

Read the original article on Business Insider

A real estate investor and agent says don't bank on rates coming down in 2025 — and shares 2 strategies to help you score a lower-than-average mortgage payment

dana bull
Dana Bull is a real-estate agent, investor, and consultant.

Courtesy of Dana Bull

  • Real estate agent and investor Dana Bull says don't count on rates dropping in 2025.
  • Instead, she offers two tips for securing a lower mortgage rate in any environment.
  • She advises talking to at least three lenders and considering temporary rate buydowns.

If you're looking to buy a home or invest in real estate in 2025, don't wait for rates to drop before making a move.

"I wouldn't base my whole plan around, 'Well, I keep hearing rates are supposed to drop,'" said investor and agent Dana Bull, noting that current rates are in line with the historical average. "This is kind of where rates sit. So, if they were to drop, that would be great, but I wouldn't be banking on it."

As of December 2024, the average 30-year mortgage rate fell to 6.30% from around 6.56% in November.

That doesn't necessarily mean you'll end up with a rate in the 6-7% range if you're buying property in 2025. Bull, who is financially independent thanks to her personal real estate portfolio and works with buyers in Massachusetts, shared two strategies to lock in a lower-than-average mortgage rate in any environment.

1. Negotiate

"People don't really realize that you can negotiate your rate," said Bull. "I know it's uncomfortable in our culture to feel like you're haggling over a rate, but I think it is really important going into a purchase that you are trying to negotiate the lowest rate possible."

It's especially important in today's environment, she added, as purchase rates are lower than refinance rates: "If I were to go and refinance property right now, I would have a higher rate than somebody who wants to go and buy that same property today. I know everybody just says, 'Buy it, don't worry about it, refinance if rates drop.' But rates need to drop significantly enough for you to be able to go and secure a lower rate as a refi."

Bull recommends talking to three different lenders, including at least one bank and one mortgage lender.

"The banks can be a little bit more nimble," she explained. For a first-time homebuyer, for example, "a bank is going to have access to certain programs versus a mortgage company." That said, "the mortgage companies are often really big, so there are some advantages there."

If you talk to three different lenders, you'll likely get three different rates β€” and they could vary more than you think, Bull said: "We are seeing so many fluctuations."

If you have a rapport with a lender, you can always give them the chance to match the lowest rate you were offered.

"If they can't, unfortunately, it's a business transaction, so you'll have to make a hard decision," she said. "If somebody comes in with a significantly lower rate and everything else is the same essentially, it does make sense to go with that lower rate, so long as that lender is going to be able to close the deal."

2. Consider a temporary rate buydown

Temporary rate buydowns, which reduce the buyer's interest rate for a limited period, typically between one and three years, have become more popular as rates have increased.

"It's in the form of a buyer credit," explained Bull. "There is a max amount which will depend on several factors, like purchase price and prepaids." As an agent, she works with the lender to determine the exact numbers for each property.

Bull says that she and her clients are turning to buydowns, which are negotiated between buyer and seller, in cases where the properties aren't as competitive, don't have multiple offers, or if they're working with a motivated seller.

"Instead of negotiating something like a closing cost credit or negotiating on price, we might be negotiating something called a '2-1 buydown,'" she explained. This lowers the interest rate for the first two years of a loan. "For instance, the first year, if they were ordinarily going to get an interest rate of 6.5%, we can figure out what amount of money is needed to get them down to 4.5% that first year, and then the second year maybe it steps up to 5.5%. That can shave thousands of dollars off."

This could make sense for a buyer who predicts the first few years of ownership will be cost-heavy, and a lower rate could provide some cushion.

"It's not always something that you can negotiate, and it doesn't always make sense, but there are definitely situations where we're doing it because why not?" said Bull, adding that it's important to consider your priorities before doing so because you can't negotiate everything.

"If you have a seller that's willing to negotiate, then you can decide, 'Should I be negotiating a buydown? Should I be negotiating a credit? Should I be trying to get them to repair stuff at the property?' It's looking at the bigger picture and deciding, as a buyer, what would be most helpful for me at this point?"

Read the original article on Business Insider

A FIRE blogger who built a 7-figure net worth shares 3 books that changed his money mindset

andre nader
Andre Nader is the founder of the financial independence platform FAANG FIRE.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

  • Financial independence writer Andre Nader built a seven-figure net worth before age 40.
  • The former Meta employee shares his top money-related books, including 'The Simple Path to Wealth.'
  • Another one of his favorites, 'Die With Zero,' helped him become more comfortable spending his money.

At 37, Andre Nader has enough in savings that he doesn't expect to ever have to work a 9-to-5 again.

After 15 years working in tech β€” nine of which were at Meta β€” he was laid off in 2023. Rather than job search, he leaned into the Substack publication he started in 2021, FAANG FIRE, and started doing one-on-one coaching. FIRE stands for financial independence retire early.

He and his wife, who works as a designer for Uber, had been preparing to retire early and had already built a sizable, seven-figure nest egg. Between her tech income and their savings, they had enough to sustain their family of three in San Francisco. While Nader is technically retired in his 30s, he says he'll consider himself "semi-FIRE'd" until his wife walks away from her job.

The financial independence blogger and coach shared three books that changed his money mindset and helped him build wealth.

"The Simple Path to Wealth" by JL Collins

JL Collins' 2016 book is a popular choice within the FIRE community.

The author delivers on his promise of providing a simple path to wealth β€” his main advice is to buy stocks via Vanguard's Total Stock Market Index Fund β€” which Nader said he appreciated as a former tech employee: "Particularly in tech, a lot of our work involves being hyper-creative or being extremely analytical and doing very complicated things in our day-to-day. We think we need to take the same approach to our finances."

Collins rejects that belief and suggests the opposite, Nader said: "It doesn't have to be complicated. You can rely on the math that other people have done and then keep it boring."

Nader didn't always keep things simple: He said he lost a good chunk of money trading options in his early 20s. However, once he learned about low-cost index fund investing, he was sold on the effective and hands-off strategy. He's built wealth by investing primarily in Fidelity and Vanguard index funds, including VTI and VXUS.

"Die With Zero" by Bill Perkins

Nader says his spending philosophy shifted after reading Bill Perkins' unconventional financial guide.

While saving money always came naturally to Nader, which was a good quality for someone pursuing FIRE, his frugality sometimes prevented him from spending on things that would enrich his life.

Perkins' book was "a good counter for me," he said. "I'm naturally frugal and naturally live within spreadsheets. 'Die With Zero' forced me to think about experiences more in the same way that I think about my finances: Just like my finances can compound, life experiences can also compound."

andre nader
Nader and his family reside in San Francisco.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

Nader says that one of the frameworks detailed in the book particularly resonated with him: Think about your life in five-year buckets. Then, maximize the experiences that make the most sense during those timeframes.

For example, in the first five years of his daughter's life, "maybe those aren't the best years for going to Disney World," he said. "Maybe that's going to be when my daughter is five to 10."

At 37, he's also thinking about prioritizing more adventuresome activities while he can: "In my 55 to 60 bracket, I probably don't want to be downhill skiing because maybe my knees aren't going to be in a place they are while I'm in my 30s and early 40s. So having those experiences matched up with my life stages is helpful."

"Enough" by Jack Bogle

When Nader decided to pursue FIRE, one of the first steps he took was establishing his "enough number," a concept he read about in Vanguard founder Jack Bogle's book.

It's essentially the amount of money that would allow him to never have to earn another dollar.

"'Need' is the big thing," Nader said. "You can continue earning more, but you don't necessarily need it to hit your goals and to live the life that you want. For me, that was always a big motivating factor."

As of late 2024, his "enough" number is around $5.6 million, which he calculated by considering his family's annual spend in San Francisco and future costs like healthcare and his daughter's education.

Having experienced a layoff in 2023, he's hyper-aware that life happens, and his expenses and circumstances will continue to change. For that reason, "I'm constantly running my numbers and trying to calculate how much enough is."

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A real estate investor and agent explains why 2 days before Christmas is her 'favorite day of the year' to submit home offers — and other 'pockets' when you can score a good deal

dana bull
Dana Bull is a real-estate agent, investor, and consultant.

Courtesy of Dana Bull

  • Real-estate agent Dana Bull advises submitting home offers two days before Christmas.
  • In general, buyers are distracted during the holidays, so it can be a good time to score a deal.
  • Another good window of opportunity is the Fourth of July weekend.

If real-estate investor and agent Dana Bull was looking to expand her portfolio, she'd be putting in offers in late December β€” specifically, two days before Christmas.

December 23 is her "favorite day of the year to submit an offer," she told Business Insider. "I find that sellers are very interested in getting a deal done going into the holidays or going into this year."

Bull works in real estate in a variety of capacities: She's a licensed agent, does real-estate consulting and coaching, and is a seasoned investor who owns multi-family and single-family homes throughout Massachusetts.

She's learned that if you want to land a good deal on a property, timing matters.

"It's always a good time to be deal hunting during a distracted market," Bull said β€” and people tend to be distracted over the holidays. "Most people are just in coast mode, but if you're not in coast mode or if you can take yourself out of coast mode, this is such a great time."

Starting a negotiation a few days before Christmas is a good time for several reasons.

"In general, people are in good spirits, and sellers tend to feel a sense of relief if they receive an offer because they usually aren't expecting one," she said. "Christmas Eve puts a deadline to get things wrapped up with the negotiating and creates a sense of urgency."

She says she would avoid submitting an offer on actual holidays β€” "it's a bit rude and unrealistic to get a response" β€” but the days following Christmas are fair game. "I almost always submit an offer that week. It's a time of great reflection, and sellers are generally motivated to put a deal together so they can enter the new year with a plan in place."

The holiday window of opportunity is small. A couple of weeks into January, "it's like a light switch comes back on," she said, noting that mid-January is one of her busiest times of the year for consultations. "What I've noticed is this herd mentality where everybody just ebbs and flows at the same time, so if you can be flowing when everybody else is ebbing, this is when you can negotiate."

That said, "You don't want to make a bad purchase just because it's a good time of year," Bull added, but if you can carve out time to look for deals when most other investors aren't, you could be rewarded.

"There are always these pockets, like the Fourth of July is another great time where people have signed off, and I'm almost always working with somebody that weekend to try to scrounge something up."

Seasonal swings aren't a myth, and they can be significant. In her market, for example, "Massachusetts has huge seasonal swings in average pricing by like $100,000."

Regardless of your market, however, in the winter, "prices always come down," Bull explained. "And then they're going to start to climb. Then, in the summer they come back down again and they climb again in the fall. Every year it's the same quarterly trend, so if you are looking to buy a house, right now is one of the best times."

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A former homeowner on track to retire early explains why he switched to renting and isn't incorporating real estate in his investment strategy

andre nader
Andre Nader is the founder of FAANG FIRE.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

  • Andre Nader sold his Austin rental due to stress outweighing financial benefits.
  • He and his wife, who moved to SF in 2014, have found renting to be more cost-effective than owning.
  • Nader says he doesn't need to own real estate to hit his FIRE goals and focuses on index fund investing.

Andre Nader has been both a homeowner and a landlord β€” and neither are for him, at least at this moment in time.

Shortly after getting married in 2012, he and his wife bought a home in Austin. When they moved to San Francisco in 2014 for a job Nader landed with Facebook, they kept it as a rental rather than selling. Their original plan was to move back to Texas.

Nader decided to self-manage the rental from nearly 2,000 miles away, which he did for a year and a half. When his tenant gave notice to move out and Nader flew back to Austin to deal with the turnover, he was surprised with what he found.

"The place was just kind of trashed," he told Business Insider. "It needed all-new carpet. It needed a lot of work."

While the extra income had been nice β€” he said the property generated a cash flow of a couple of hundred dollars a month β€” ultimately, it wasn't worth it.

"The stress and the mental overhead were drastically outweighing any of the short-term financial benefits," said Nader, who decided to sell rather than find a new tenant. Plus, he and his wife, who had started working as a designer at Uber, were enjoying the Bay Area and found themselves pushing out their timeline. "I was never convinced we would stay in San Francisco for the long term, but I became more and more confident that we wouldn't be immediately back to Austin."

Choosing to rent to save on housing in SF and leaning into index fund investing

Nader, 37, has been pursuing FIRE (financial independence, retirement early) since his 20s. He and his wife have always lived below their means, and for years, they kept their expenses low enough so that just one of their tech incomes could cover all of their household expenses, allowing them to invest about half of their combined income.

When they moved to the Bay Area, renting made sense from a budget perspective: It was cheaper for them to rent in the pricey city β€” and it still is, said Nader: "Right now, San Francisco really favors renting. It's really hard from a pure numbers standpoint to make owning make sense."

andre nader
The Nader family resides in San Francisco.

Courtesy of Mini Anna Photography

There are exceptions, he noted: "Particularly in a place like San Francisco, a lot of the math can change with the appreciation of property values. If housing prices continue to increase, then maybe buying can come out, but if you take conservative approaches to any future increases in housing, renting just ends up making a lot more sense mathematically."

Plus, Nader was never convinced he and his family would stay in San Francisco long enough to make buying worth it.

"The Goldilocks timeline has historically been, five to seven years is when buying starts being more advantageous than renting," he said. "Now when I do the numbers, it's even longer β€” closer to the 10-year timeframe β€” and I'd never been confident that I would be in San Francisco that long."

While prudent real estate investing is a viable path to wealth, Nader doesn't believe he needs to own property to hit his financial goals.

His investment strategy revolves around low-cost index funds. He owns various Fidelity and Vanguard index funds, including Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund ETF Shares (VTI) and Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund ETF Shares (VXUS).

Nader describes the strategy as "super boring," but it's effective: It's helped him build a seven-figure net worth, which BI verified by looking at a copy of his investment report.

It's not lost on him that bringing in two tech incomes was a major advantage.

"I won the income game by being in tech, by being a dual-income household. I didn't need to be taking these outsized risks by investing in extremely speculative ways. I could be boring in my portfolio," said Nader, who worked at Meta for nine years before he was affected by the company's 2023 layoffs.

He and his wife had enough between their savings and one tech income that he didn't have to find another job, but he says he'll consider himself "semi-FIRE'd" until his wife also walks away from her job.

Nader, who spends his days writing on Substack and doing one-on-one financial independence coaching, says his investment strategy has remained the same since the layoff. He likes the hands-off approach to index fund investing, especially after experiencing what it's like to own real estate.

When he was managing the Austin rental, "I kind of quickly realized that the promise of real estate being a clearly passive investment, even if you have property managers, wasn't something that, for me, proved to be true, so it further reinforced my view around focusing on super boring, low-fee index funds," he said. "I could have a few hundred thousand dollars in real estate and maybe a million dollars in index funds, but I would be thinking about the real estate three times as much, so it would be a disproportionate amount of mental exercise, at least for me."

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A couple on track to retire early in San Francisco break down their $140,000 annual budget

andre nader
The Nader family resides in San Francisco.

Courtesy of Mini Anna Photography

  • FIRE blogger Andre Nader and his wife have been working toward early retirement for years.
  • When they were both working full-time in tech, they lived off of one income and saved the other.
  • Nader broke down their household budget from March 2023 to February 2024.

When Andre Nader sat down to calculate his "enough number" β€” the amount of money that would allow him to never have to earn another dollar and give him the option to retire early β€” the first thing he did was analyze his spending.

From there, he could work backward and estimate how much he'd need to sustain his family of three's lifestyle in retirement.

Members of the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community typically use the "4% rule," which suggests that you can safely withdraw 4% annually from your nest egg. For example, if you retire with $1 million, you should be able to withdraw $40,000 from your retirement funds each year without running out of money. To figure out your number using this rule, you simply multiply your annual spending by 25. Nader prefers to use a more conservative 3% safe withdrawal rate, which you can calculate by multiplying your annual number by 33.33.

He and his wife, who works as a designer for Uber, had been preparing to retire early together. They were on track to do so until Nader was affected by Meta's 2023 layoffs. The couple had enough between their savings and one tech income that Nader didn't have to find another job, but he says he'll consider himself "semi-FIRE'd" until his wife also walks away from her job.

They built a seven-figure net worth thanks to a variety of factors, including high incomes β€” "I won the income game by being in tech, by being a dual-income household," said Nader β€” but they've also been disciplined savers and investors.

Nader, who describes himself as "naturally frugal," said that he and his wife always kept their expenses low enough so that just one of their tech incomes could cover all of their household expenses. This allowed them to invest about half of their combined income in low-cost index funds.

Between March 20203 and February 2024, the family of three residing in San Francisco kept their annual expenses around $140,000.

Nader, who writes about financial independence on his Substack, FAANG FIRE, broke down his family's annual budget:

andre nader

Courtesy of Andre Nader

Housing: $60,000 a year ($5,000 a month). The biggest chunk of their budget (42%) goes toward rent. "Running the numbers for my personal situation, I have never been able to make home ownership pencil in within San Francisco," he wrote on his blog.

Shopping and personal: $21,473 a year ($1,789 a month).

Children: $18,136 a year ($1,511 a month). This spending category, which includes education, childcare, activities, and necessities like clothing, decreased significantly after Nader's daughter graduated from preschool and started at public school as a kindergartner.

He broke down the costs within this spending category between March 2023 and February 2024 in a separate chart.

andre nader

Courtesy of Andre Nader

Food: $16,284 a year ($1,357 a month).

Travel and vacations: $10,443 a year ($870 a month). Now that his daughter is getting older and travel is more manageable, Nader says he's intentionally trying to increase spending in this category.

Bills and utilities: $6,241 a year ($520 a month).

Health and wellness: $5,363 a year ($447 a month).

andre nader

Courtesy of Andre Nader

Transportation: $2,741 a year ($228 a month). Nader and his wife share one fully paid-off car. They also are on a pre-paid maintenance plan for the next four years.

Miscellaneous: $1,201 a year ($100 a month.)

Increasing his budget heading into 2025

After being laid off in 2023, Nader is hyper-aware that life happens, and his expenses and circumstances will continue to change.

His spending has already increased since he ran his numbers in early 2024. Most notably, his family moved so that they could be within walking distance of their daughter's school. The move bumped his rent from $5,000 a month to $8,000.

He's thinking about 2025 as an experimental year and is doing some "boundary testing" on their spending, particularly while his wife is still working.

"It's much easier to increase spend while someone in your house is working, so right now, we're like, 'Hey, what would it be like if we did live in a single-family home in San Francisco? Is that the life that we want?'" he said.

andre nader
Andre Nader is the founder of FAANG FIRE.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

His spending philosophy has shifted after reading Bill Perkins' "Die With Zero," he added.

The book was "a good counter for me," he said. "I'm naturally frugal and naturally live within spreadsheets. 'Die With Zero' forced me to think about experiences more in the same way that I think about my finances: Just like my finances can compound, life experiences can also compound. That led me to prioritize travel to a higher degree."

Nader doesn't want to sacrifice a certain quality of life or experiences in his pursuit of FIRE. He recognizes that what he and his family value will shift over time, which is why he periodically revisits his spending and "enough number."

"What 'enough' is in 2022 ended up being different than what I thought 'enough' would be in 2024," he said. "I realized that I did want to spend more in certain places, so I explicitly forced myself to spend more on things like travel. I realized I was unnecessarily saving more than I needed to, and I wasn't spending in a way that was bringing me happiness."

Read the original article on Business Insider

I launched an eCommerce company with a $10,000 budget after interviewing top Amazon sellers. Here's everything I outsourced to save time, including a $250 task that was the best money I spent.

peak pickleball
The author and her cofounder launched Peak Pickleball with a $10,000 budget.

Katie Monds

  • After years of writing about successful eCommerce entrepreneurs, I decided to start my own business.
  • A friend and I pooled $10,000 to launch a pickleball paddle company.
  • We outsourced various tasks to save time and, ultimately, improve the quality of our product.

As I've now learned firsthand, starting a business is hard β€” and takes time. A lot of time.

I didn't doubt that heading into the endeavor, but it's different when you're in it β€” when you're thinking about your brand and its voice, when you're prototyping a product, and when you start shelling out your own money.

After years of reporting on successful eCommerce entrepreneurs, I decided to try my hand at launching and selling a product. I brought a friend and former roommate on board, and in April 2024, we deposited $10,000 into a business checking account to bring our product idea β€” pickleball paddles β€” to life.

Depositing funds was the easy part. The building-the-business part has been a tedious challenge that started nearly two years ago in the living room of our Los Angeles apartment when we first began tossing product ideas around.

We both work full-time jobs and figured outsourcing certain tasks would be key. While we were willing to commit some weekday nights and weekends to our side project, we didn't want it to feel all-consuming. We also know what we're good at β€” and, perhaps more importantly, we know what we're not so good at. Creating a high-quality brand and product that we were proud of would mean hiring smart, talented people to help with the stuff we're not great at.

Here's everything we've outsourced so far to get Peak Pickleball up and running.

Product sourcing. Our product is the heart of our business β€” and we only offer one β€” so nailing the design was crucial. I'd learned from interviewing top Amazon sellers that finding a reliable supplier would be crucial.

In the early stages of the project when we were still messing around with different product ideas, we used Alibaba to connect with suppliers and start to understand manufacturing costs. There were endless suppliers to choose from who were all quick to message back and eager to work with us, but we were hesitant to proceed. The language barrier was evident and the thought of eventually sending thousands of dollars overseas to buy inventory from a supplier we'd never met was nervewracking.

peak pickleball
Prototypes arrived at the author's apartment in Los Angeles.

Kathleen Elkins

Ultimately, we chose to work with a product-sourcing company founded by eCommerce entrepreneur Joe Reeves. He's familiar with the challenges of finding a good, trustworthy supplier, having gone through the process himself when launching his wallet business. Reeves started the companyΒ 330 TradingΒ with a college friend who lives in Taipei and is on the ground communicating in person with various factories in Asia, including the one that is manufacturing our pickleball paddle and packaging.

Packaging design. We hired a freelance designer through Fiverr to help design our packaging. We had an idea of what we wanted it to look like but didn't have the skills (or bandwidth to learn the skills necessary) to execute it.

peak pickleball packaging
A Fiverr freelancer helped the Peak cofounders design the packaging.

330 Trading

Website. We also outsourced web design, which neither of us had experience with, and hired a different freelancer through Fiverr to put together a basic Shopify website. Moving forward, we'll be able to do site upkeep ourselves, but hiring someone to create a clean, compelling homepage and build out the other main pages was well worth $158.

The best $250 we spent: Outsourcing logo design

We've spent a lot of money, nearly $6,000, on startup costs. Some of those costs were unavoidable, like the $39 a month we pay for Shopify Basic, while others were more of a choice: We spent about $2,500 to get our paddle approved by USA Pickleball so that it can be used in USAP-sanctioned tournaments. We're betting on the pricey stamp of approval, which also helps legitimize our brand, paying off in the long term.

The costs that we outsourced technically weren't necessary, but they saved us time and, ultimately, improved our product.

One expense that we outsourced, in particular, feels fully worth the cost: We hired a professional graphic designer to develop our logo.

peak pickleball
A graphic designer helped develop the triple-layered "P" logo.

Katie Monds

We worked with a friend we knew well and trusted fully. It was a back-and-forth process that started with us answering five branding questions she emailed to us ahead of our first meeting:

  1. What are some adjectives to describe how you want your brand to come across? Or how you want people to feel when interacting with it?
  2. Are there a few brands that you both really admire (for messaging, logo, brand activity, etc.)?
  3. Other than on the paddle where else can you envision the logo being used/interacted with?
  4. Do you envision brand activity beyond selling paddles and the marketing efforts to support that?
  5. What are the spec sizes/requirements for branding relative to the prototype paddle specifically?

Sitting down and talking through our answers helped us nail down the identity of our brand: We are energetic, playful, and innovative β€” and our designer created a logo and color palette that represents who Peak Pickleball is.

We paid $250, and it's the best money we've spent on the business to date.

Read the original article on Business Insider

A millennial used a little-known tax strategy to 'exchange' his rental property and sidestep capital gains taxes indefinitely. He explains the challenges and why it was worth the hassle.

jose palafox
Jose Palafox and his family reside in the Bay Area.

Katie Rodriguez

  • Jose Palafox used a DST 1031 exchange to defer taxes on his Portland rental sale.
  • The strategy allows reinvestment into a trust, so Palafox no longer has to manage a property.
  • It wasn't the simplest strategy to execute and involved a lot of paperwork and moving parts.

In the summer of 2024, Jose Palafox took advantage of a little-known tax strategy called a DST 1031 exchange, which allows investors to avoid capital gains tax on the sale of a rental property.

Palafox was ready to sell his Portland rental, which had become more of a headache than a cash cow.

"My HOA fees had increased, my taxes had increased, and rents in Portland had gone down, so I wasn't making much if anything," the San Francisco-based millennial told Business Insider. "And I hadn't ever wanted to be a landlord."

He found himself a landlord when he got a job offer in the Bay Area while living in Portland. Rather than selling his primary residence at the time, he converted it to a rental, heeding common advice to hold onto real estate: "Everyone told me, 'Buy a house and don't sell it.'"

Executing a DST 1031 exchange, in which you sell a property and reinvest the proceeds into a Delaware Statutory Trust (DST), not only allowed him to defer capital gains tax β€” it also released him from landlord responsibilities. He essentially exchanged his Portland condo for a DST, which holds commercial real estate assets, and now owns fractions of high-grade institutional properties. He receives a $550 dividend payment each month, which BI verified by looking at a deposit made into his checking account from the DST.

Palafox says he's bringing in more from the DST than he was when he was renting his condo, and the investment is completely passive.

It was the right move for him and his financial situation β€” he didn't need to touch the proceeds from the property sale and could afford to reinvest it β€” and he avoided a tax consequence while gaining exposure to real estate assets he could never have afforded as an individual investor.

Of course, the process, which Palafox completed in the summer of 2024 according to an exchange statement viewed by BI, didn't come without its barriers to entry. Here are the challenges he faced before and during the exchange.

1. You have to be an accredited investor. To do a DST 1031 exchange, you have to be what's called an accredited investor. There are a few ways to qualify: having a net worth over $1 million, not including the value of your primary residence; having an annual income of $200,000 as an individual or $300,000 if you're married and filing jointly (this is how Palafox qualified); or having certain professional certifications, such as the Series 7, Series 65, or Series 82 licenses.

Unless you're an accredited investor, it can be difficult to even find information about various DST sponsors, noted Palfox, who hired a financial advisor to walk him through his options: "You have to be a qualified investor in order to even see the list of available DSTs."

2. Prepare to deal with a lot of paperwork and multiple parties. In Palafox's experience, there was a lot of paperwork β€” he said he signed about 10 documents via Docusign from start to finish β€” and there were a lot of moving parts. In addition to his advisor, he worked with a real-estate agent to list and sell his rental, two separate title companies (one for the property sale and another for the DST), and the DST sponsor.

He also had to find a qualified intermediary (QI). This is a neutral third party that holds the home sale proceeds until the investor buys their replacement property.

3. It can be an emotional roller coaster, especially when your money is with the QI. The most unsettling part of the process for Palafox was immediately after he sold his rental.

"For a period of time it felt like I had no idea where my money was from the sale," he said. On paper, his six-figure sale proceeds were in an escrow account, "but beyond a piece of paper I docusigned and the general say-so of people I'd never met on email I didn't really know how I would get my money back if I had to. My wife accused me of getting into a Ponzi scheme for a while."

He still has some anxiety about his investment because it's so different from anything else he owns. The only "proof" he has that he owns anything is an email from his DST sponsor congratulating him for his purchase, "which is still kind of terrifying," he said.

4. It could complicate your tax situation. "One thing I am not looking forward to is paying taxes," said Palafox. "Depending on the product you could be paying taxes in multiple additional states. I will use an accountant but I expect some increased costs and complications to file come tax time."

Even once you've gotten past the major barriers to entry to doing a DST 1031 exchange, "it's still a lot more challenging and in some ways less satisfying than clicking a button on your favorite trading app and buying stocks or crypto," he added. "There's no ticker to watch, these are boring investments that produce boring returns."

Still, he'd deal with the paperwork and stress all over again if he could go back, particularly because of the "UPREIT" option. Palafox said that what really sold him on this strategy was another tax code "loophole," of sorts, known as the 721 exchange, or UPREIT.

Eventually, a DST will end (most have a predetermined lifespan of five to 10 years), at which point his options are "to either 1031 into another DST or, ideally, be bought by a REIT fund that wants to own and operate these buildings longer term," he said. "Using a 721 exchange, I can roll into the REIT fund, again deferring taxes. At the end of this process, I would own shares in a private or public REIT, which I could fractionally liquidate. So, if I want to sell half of my investment, I could."

In short, at the end of his DST, he could get into a REIT without causing a taxable event.

"When I finally understood the flow from my investment into a REIT fund, the light really went off for me," he said. "I remember saying, 'Wow, this is the future,' and now I'm a bit of a fan, I guess."

Read the original article on Business Insider

An ex-Meta employee and FIRE blogger explains how he used the 'mega backdoor Roth' strategy that allows high-earners to bypass Roth IRA income limits and contribute up to $69,000 in a 401(k)

andre nader
Andre Nader resides in San Francisco and considers himself 'semi-FIRE'd.'

Courtesy of Andre Nader

  • Andre Nader built a seven-figure portfolio by saving and investing in index funds.
  • He leveraged his tech career and dual-income household to maximize savings and investments.
  • One strategy he used to max out tax-advantaged accounts is known as 'a mega backdoor Roth'.

Andre Nader built a seven-figure portfolio before age 40 by following a few simple fundamentals: save a chunk of your income, invest it in low-cost index funds, and max out tax-advantaged accounts.

It helped that he worked in tech. He said he started with a modest $40,000 salary right after graduating, but eventually landed a high-paying job at Meta in 2014.

"I won the income game by being in tech, by being a dual-income household," Nader, whose wife is a designer at Uber, told Business Insider.

When he got laid off in 2023, he and his wife had enough between her tech income and their savings that he didn't have to find another job. Nader, who'd been writing about financial independence on his blog FAANG FIRE since 2021, now writes on Substack full-time and does one-on-one FIRE (financial independence, retire early) coaching.

As a high-earner who describes himself as "naturally frugal," Nader found himself with excess savings each month. When he was working full-time, he and his wife used one of their incomes for household expenses and saved the other.

He spent a lot of time thinking about, "How do I save this in the most efficient way possible?" he said. "And, for many in tech, it's going to be about taking advantage of those tax-advantaged accounts. Because when you're in those extremely high earning years, any amount that you can defer those taxes into the future is potentially extremely, extremely valuable."

One particular tax-advantaged account, a Roth IRA, offers major benefits, including tax-free growth β€” but there's an income limit that can prevent individuals like Nader from contributing directly to it. In 2024, single tax filers must make less than $146,000 to contribute to a Roth, and married couples filing jointly must make less than $230,000.

Nader has used a workaround known as a mega backdoor to sidestep the Roth IRA income limit, and he recommends all high-earners take advantage of it if they can.

Using a mega backdoor Roth to contribute up to $69,000 a year into his 401(k)

To understand how a mega backdoor Roth works, it's important to first understand how after-tax 401(k) contributions work. Some employers offer an after-tax 401(k) β€” Nader had access to one when he was at Meta, and his wife has one at Uber β€” which allows you to save more after you've maxed out your traditional 401(k).

In 2024, the annual contribution limit for a 401(k) is $23,000 for employee contributions; but the combined employee and employer contribution limit is $69,000. Say you max out your 401(k) and contribute $23,000, and your employer contributes $5,000 through the matching program, so you have $28,000 in your 401(k). Since the limit is $69,000, if your plan allows for after-tax contributions, you can put another $41,000 in after-tax dollars into the account.

andre nader
Nader, the founder of FAANG FIRE, his wife, who works at Uber, and their daughter.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

In Nader's wife's case, Uber matches up to $8,000, so after maxing out her 401(k) in 2024, she'll make an additional $38,000 after-tax contribution ($69,000 - $23,000 - $8,000), he explained.

The catch is, while sitting in the after-tax state, any earnings you make on those contributions are taxable.

That's where the mega backdoor Roth comes into play. It allows you to shift after-tax 401(k) contributions to a Roth IRA or Roth 401(k), where it can grow tax-free. Not all 401(k) plans allow this conversion and you'll want to understand your plan, including its restrictions, before making any after-tax contributions.

In Nader's experience, executing the mega backdoor Roth when he was working at Meta was quick and easy. He logged into Fidelity NetBenefits (his 401(k) provider) and elected the percentage of his after-tax earnings he wanted to contribute. Then, he was able to do an in-plan conversion and selected the option to "convert after-tax contributions."

"Every single time I post about it on LinkedIn, someone doesn't know that they had this benefit," said Nader, who has nearly 25,000 LinkedIn followers and specifically writes for FAANG (Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google) employees looking to achieve financial independence. "This extra $30,000, effectively, can end up in a Roth 401(k) β€” and that's a super powerful type of account."

He recognizes that not everyone has access to this strategy, nor has the funds to save $69,000 a year in a 401(k). But if you're a high-earner who would be saving that money anyway and your plan allows a mega backdoor Roth, "it's really valuable for them to be aware that exists."

Read the original article on Business Insider

A FIRE blogger decided to test the benefits of the popular triple-tax advantaged HSA. He explains why it wasn't worth the hassle and wants to switch health insurance plans in 2025.

andre nader
Andre Nader is the founder of FAANG FIRE.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

  • Andre Nader switched from an EPO health insurance plan to an HDHP to get access to an HSA.
  • Nader found the mental burden of managing healthcare costs outweighed HSA tax benefits.
  • He plans to switch back to an EPO plan in 2025 for simplicity.

Andre Nader spent years on Meta's growth team, where his work involved experimentation and testing to determine how to improve specific products.

"I like to use that same testing methodology in my own life," the 37-year-old founder of financial independence blog FAANG FIRE told Business Insider. After getting laid off in 2023, Nader didn't have to job search thanks to the seven-figure net worth he built after years of investing in index funds and transitioned to writing on Substack full-time.

In 2024, he decided to put the popular, triple tax-advantaged health savings account (HSA) to the test. One requirement of using an HSA is that you must have a High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP), so he switched his family from an EPO health insurance plan, which he'd used for most of the past decade.

Nader said the EPO plan would be the simpler choice for him and his family β€” he wouldn't have to think about deductibles, the co-pays would be low, and all major hospitals were in-network β€” but he couldn't help but wonder if the savings from having an HSA would outweigh the extra hassle of having an HDHP, which offers a lower premium but comes with a higher deductible.

The benefits of using an HSA, which he describes as a "magical account," were obvious to him. It is a unicorn in that it offers a triple tax benefit:

  1. You can contribute pretax dollars, which reduces your taxable income.
  2. You can invest your HSA funds (the investment options vary by provider), and your contributions and earnings grow tax-free.
  3. You can withdraw your money tax-free to cover qualified medical expenses (including things like copays, lab fees, and vaccines). After 65, you can use your HSA money to cover any expense without incurring a penalty, but the funds are subject to income tax.

Consider other tax-advantaged accounts. With a Roth IRA, you contribute after-tax money (and eventually withdraw it tax-free); with a traditional 401(k), you contribute pre-tax money (and eventually pay taxes when you withdraw).

"It's very rare to have an account where you're putting money in pre-tax and then also taking it out without paying taxes on it β€” and the entire time it's there, it can grow tax- and penalty-free," said Nader.

To maximize HSA gains, investors will invest their funds (rather than letting their HSA money sit in a cash account) and avoid touching it so it can grow and compound over time. Not touching your HSA funds means covering your medical expenses out of pocket, which is what Nader did throughout 2024. He saved all of his receipts from health-related expenses, so he'd have the option to reimburse himself later if he needed to (there's no time limit on when you can reimburse yourself from your HSA).

"In a spreadsheet, this is very lucrative," he said of taking full advantage of an HSA. Some companies will even contribute a certain amount to their employees' HSAs, which is essentially free money. "However, life isn't always about what happens in a spreadsheet."

Changing his coverage in 2025: 'I don't want to be living a life where I'm thinking about the cost of my healthcare'

As Nader's year of experimentation comes to a close, he's confident that an HDHP is not the right fit for his family and is switching healthcare plans in 2025. He says he'll likely go back to using an EPO.

"Even though the HSA is an amazing account that I can grow tax- and penalty-free forever, for me, the incremental benefit wasn't there," he said.

andre nader
Nader and his family reside in San Francisco.

Courtesy of Andre Nader

His main issue with using an HDHP and HSA was the mental bandwidth it required.

"The reason you're saving so much is you need to actually be thinking about your medical expenses more," said Nader. "Every single time that you go to urgent care, you're paying out of pocket until you hit a deductible or your out-of-pocket maximum. Every single time you go to a specialist, you're paying out-of-pocket until you hit your out-of-pocket maximum. So there was a lot more mental overhead in thinking about my healthcare decisions."

He felt like he couldn't be on autopilot like he was with an EPO plan, where an urgent care visit may cost him $10. With an HDHP, that same visit may cost hundreds of dollars, enough to stop and think about whether to get care.

"What's been happening over this year is, every single time I've needed to go to urgent care, I've thought about it a little bit, and I really didn't like that my health decisions were intersecting with my financial decisions," he said. "I didn't want to think about whether I should go to the emergency room if I had a cut; I should just go to the emergency room and not factor in the expenses."

At the end of the day, "I don't want to be living a life where I'm thinking about the cost of my healthcare."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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