“Why Invest in Student Housing?”
The simple answer is, we get 2 to 3 times the average single family rental rate coming in secured
each and every month by multiple tenants and their parents!
We like to think it chose us, but basically when we got serious about real estate, we ended-up
finding dumpy houses by our hometown University. The problem was we struggled to find
“tenant home buyers” for a rent to own program. Everyone inquiring was college kids or parents
wanting to just rent them for the 2-4 years they were in college and not necessarily own them…
so the light bulb went off.
We did a brief research about campus and found almost 70% of the students had to find a place
off campus to live due to the University not having enough housing on campus available. That
70% netted roughly 18,000 students who needed a home near campus.
The main question was, what do they pay to live in the dorms? You see, parents have been
saving the entire student’s life for college. When we can offer their child a safe, clean place to
live that provides more space, a private bedroom, private bathroom, and saves mom and dad
money, it’s an easy sell and actually you get a waiting list and leases signed for up to 2 years in
advance, which means little to no vacancy! Wow!
We set the room rates just shy of that dorm number for a clean, safe home close to campus, and
the calls started coming in. The key for us was to ask the person calling to find their own friends
to share the home with and come back to us to secure the whole house with one lease.
Here is the cool part, the heartwarming part…
When I got started in real estate I was scared-to-death to have to evict someone; a family,
children, people down on their luck, even around holidays. How could I ever do this to someone?
I heard horror stories of single family income earners and how they’d lost their job. They would
call and beg for a few months to catch up and beg for their deposit back. It’s all they had left, etc.
But what about me, now I would be stuck with an additional mortgage, and that scared me
because I’ve been broke and down on my luck, and I couldn’t imagine…. OMG, would I go
broke again?
I began to think how I could do this and keep my risk low. The answer was right in front of me.
I just needed more people on the lease. That’s the key, in single family rentals you don’t get
more money by having more people on the lease, but with students, you get more money for
more people! Now I have multiple opportunities to collect rent. If one kid can’t pay, that’s ok. In
order for them to all stay, someone has to get the missing student’s rent paid!
What happens if a kid drops out of school and mom and dad quit paying rent? It’s unlikely
because the system we use has each student and their parents on the lease. Plus, we’re flexible in
the fact that if someone needs to leave, that’s ok. We build it in for the students to have the
ability to just replace themselves in the group, and we update the lease!
See how simple that is! (Shhh, I just gave away the biggest secret that makes us successful in not
having any vacancies). You can thank me later.
Here’s the deal, get Rich in the Niche, or add another tool to the tool box. Maybe you just need
this one strategy to make money while your kid’s in school, or maybe you’re heading off to
college and want to make money while getting an education. That’s what I did.
I bought a house on a contract for deed, rented the extra rooms to friends and lived rent free!
During this election, I didn’t worry about who got elected or how it would affect my student
housing portfolio. I don’t worry about the next recession. Why?
Here’s a thought…the worse the market gets, the higher the enrollment is. Folks are going back
for higher education and staying in longer. And, it’s not just the 18-22 year olds, but up to 26
years old. And they all need a place to live, with a short commute. Students themselves stay
consistent. How many people do you know getting ready for college, in college, or want to go
back to college? Universities are bringing in new programs and growing the education side, but
not the housing on campus, and if they are, it simply isn’t enough.
How about this thought… what about parties and damages to the properties? With the system,
we’ve created, it’s fixed before it gets started. Here are a couple of key ingredients: most
students rent houses after the first year, most of the partiers have dropped out by then and lost the
support of the parents. We set the expectations up front with mom and dad involved as well as
the multiple roommates. Human nature says there is at least one in every group that will almost
force a good result and/or fix the problems internally in the group, because they don’t want to
lose their safe place to live.
Funny Story, I had a group of football boys in a house (5 of them), and one day my 6 foot 5, 300
plus pounds (I am all of 5 ft. 1) lineman stands before me with the stove door in his hand. He
says, “Please don’t tell my coach. How much to fix it?” I said, “$500 bucks,” and he bought a
new stove. Boom, done!
Another huge incentive is the security deposit. It’s happily given back upon departure of
returning the place in its move-in state (also saving you work, time, money, and a quicker
turnover). Surprise is they’ll even clean the carpets and hire a cleaning lady (or mom) before
they do their final walk through to depart. They don’t want to leave college with ruined credit
after spending 10’s of thousands of dollars to get the dream job and parents don’t want their
credit ruined either.
Many kids have never shared a room with a brother or sister or another family member, so
they’re used to having privacy, whereas the dorms and the massive complexes don’t really offer.
This gives them an option to have that same feeling they grew up with and parents really want
them to have that same feeling.
This is our “long game” of the portfolio or our “hold-keep retirement inventory;” the mortgage is
getting paid down, huge cash flow every month, multiple people securing it, very little risk, and
very little work. It’s a goldmine in the niche. I have a ton of golden geese spitting off double or
triple the cash flow of normal single family rentals, and that is why student housing pays off.