ABCs of Flipping: Your Guide to Buying, Rehabbing, and Selling Houses
By Afa Pitts
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About this ebook
Afa Pitts
AFA PITTS is a real estate developer and founder of API, Inc. based in Austin, Texas. She is involved in a wide variety of projects and investments throughout the Southwest. With a background in medicine, and a keen entrepreneurial eye, Afa has focused her creative talents and managerial and business acumen toward real estate. As a woman business leader, she has been a force to reckon with, using her drive to find opportunities in one of the hottest real estate development markets in the United States. Though API has expanded into commercial development, Afa still regularly shares her insights and guidance in the house flipping arena. Now, at last, she has assembled her best advice into one comprehensive book.
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ABCs of Flipping - Afa Pitts
INTRODUCTION
House flipping has never been more enticing and exciting. The popularity of various reality shows based around flipping and design has skyrocketed. Who doesn’t love to see those transformative befores
and afters
? Watching a young couple find the starter town house of their dreams or a family find their perfect forever home pulls us all in emotionally. These shows spur the creative mind with what is possible in a house redesign or flip.
Knocking down walls, building custom closets, creating a new kitchen, painting the exterior, and landscaping—some homes need a little work, and some are gutted from top to bottom. The best designers and flippers are visionary and see the potential of a house with a little (or a lot of ) TLC.
For me personally, house flipping not only provided an excellent income and a pathway to business investment, but it also afforded me the ability to both help people and have a creative career that isn’t just a nine-to-five job. I’ve since moved on to investing in businesses—but it all started with house flipping. I knew even as a medical doctor that business was something I was both interested in and excelled at.
Average profits for house flips can be between $30,000 and $60,000, depending on the number of repairs needed.¹ However, certain markets and certain price points can deliver much higher profits. Even with having investments across the country, I really like and liked working in Texas, where the market is considered hot (as of this writing, but markets are rapidly changing—and house flippers should know you can expect a bumpy ride sometimes). Hot markets, though, have limited inventory, since everything gets snapped up so quickly—so a house flipper is going to want to be as networked and connected to the community and contacts in that market as possible. But there has never been a more exciting time to be in the flipping business.
My background as a medical doctor always combined my compassionate nature with my analytical side. That same duality was part of my approach to flipping and investment. When I moved to the United States—confronted with red tape of transferring my medical license and never wanting to be idle—I was intrigued by the idea of pursuing business opportunities. I loved seeing my vision for a house come alive. I was inspired by the idea of finding a run-down house, a property that was outdated or needed some attention and TLC, and transforming it for a new, young family or someone who wanted to be in that neighborhood but lacked the skills and concepts to transform the house themselves. Because of my methods, API Inc. (https://apinvestments.us) offered quality homes with attractive finishes and the look home buyers seek. I often heard (and still hear) from buyers even two years later or more: Oh, we still love everything about the house. Whenever we have company, everyone just adores our home.
I stand behind our work, our homes, our product. Those calls made me feel good about my visions for those homes.
Another aspect I loved about finding people the home that was right for them was that it was a big deal. People do not change homes every day. It’s something you do rarely (sometimes only once!), and you might change every five or ten years or longer. In fact, according to the National Association of REALTORS®, in 2018, the median time people stayed in their homes was thirteen years.² So buying a home is a major decision and purchase, especially for those younger families or first-time buyers, and they’re very appreciative. I’m still in touch with so many people whom we sold houses to. And I think part of it is that we didn’t utilize a real estate agent, or that in-between person (something I discuss in the book). It all came directly to and from us, which made it kind of like keeping it in the family in our company.
I’ve also always wanted to combine my skill and desire to help people with business in one way or another. I’ve always been skilled at managing people and just managing in general—juggling all those balls in the air. I always knew I would do something in that direction. Then it so happened that when I moved to Texas, I settled in the greater Austin area. Without even knowing it, years ago, it was the perfect place to go into this kind of business because of growth in the area. Austin, between 2010 and 2020, experienced a population increase of 21 percent.³ In competitive markets like Austin and elsewhere, people especially needed my service, which is why we established our headquarters in Austin.
With the success the house development brought us, API Inc. was able to grow and branch out into business acquisition. We now invest in other businesses, one of the main focuses being medical businesses; having a medical background makes the process easy and seamless. In short, house flipping opened up my world to so many opportunities, and I have learned so much along the way. Some people go into house flipping and continue with it forever, growing and scaling it. They may hold onto some properties as rentals or mix their portfolio. Others may use the experiences they gain from flipping to get into commercial real estate, development, or other areas.
As a successful house flipper and developer, I’m asked a lot of questions. Face it, we all have design questions, real estate questions. And because of all those home design and transformation shows, everyone is fascinated by house flipping. When I set out to write this book, I came up with the idea of a dictionary of sorts. Each letter represents a topic, a principle, or something you need to know before you consider entering into or investing in this field. Even if you have no interest in house flipping yourself but are considering buying a flipped home or investing in a company like mine or partnering with one, The ABCs of Flipping: Your A-to-Z Guide to Buying, Rehabbing, and Selling Houses will give you a solid background on the terms and ideas you need to know to educate yourself.
The knowledge and experience I have led me to want to show others how to do it—and what to do and not do. The pitfalls and pluses are all spelled out. If you aren’t sure where to start, this guide is a gentle introduction.
So join me as we take a trip through the alphabet of house flipping. I hope to help you flip your life!
sec01A
Analyzing the Market
Analyzing the market for your house-flipping business or investment is very important. This letter is not about choosing the house itself (we get into that more deeply in C: Choose Wisely). This is about the market as a whole. You must be educated on everything from supply chains to inventory to trends in the area you are working. If you are not, you could make costly mistakes—or be taken advantage of.
When I first started out as a house flipper, I spent a lot of time finding properties and being on the job sites themselves. This was my baby.
Later, as I put my team together (covered in T: Teams), a solid group of contractors, subcontractors, vendors, and others I had faith in, I could spend more time finding greater numbers of properties and analyzing market trends, some of the higher-level analyses my company needed.
Usually weekly, but at least twice a month, though, you want to check the following:
•Real estate association websites. While you want to know about individual REALTORS® in your area who are popular, selling a lot, specialists in a neighborhood you plan to work in, etc., real estate association websites will offer overall information for the area you are eyeing. They often have statistics for the market that will help you in your own personal analyses.
•Websites for the brokers. We will get into brokers in more detail in the letter B. These are more individual brokers—what they are selling, promoting, etc. Pay attention to how they market, to their brand, and to their specialties.
•Listings from wholesalers. Real estate wholesalers can be a very important part of your house-flipping business—and we will cover them in the letter W. For now, know they buy up many properties and attempt to sell off the contracts quickly, allowing house flippers to buy multiple properties from the wholesalers for a fee.
•Gross domestic product, inflation numbers, and supply chain issues. This is one of the great things about the internet and real estate. It’s public; you can look at it. You can look at numbers, numbers, and more numbers. How are house prices trending? What is the inventory in your area? What parts of the supply chain are having difficulty? What are inflation or recession indicators?
When the prices are very high, demand is very high, and there are not enough houses for people looking to buy, you want to be flipping—renovating, reselling, and not holding onto houses or inventory because holding in a hot market does not make profitable sense.
In addition, for property owners, renting properties was less advisable during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic because there were restrictions, such as not evicting nonpaying tenants during the crisis. With the world uncertain, you now need to consider unusual market conditions.
When the market is normal
(and let’s face it, with so many changes in the world, we won’t always know where or when that is for sure), when things are not quite so hot, you might consider a different approach, and buy, flip, and rent out properties (or do Airbnbs, which I discuss in G: Geographic Locations). You don’t want to be reactive—waiting until the market totally shifts and then adapting to it. Instead, you want to be proactive, prepared for change before it happens.
You want to be proactive, prepared for change before it happens.
Also be aware of the consumer price index, for example, and other market indicators. Unfortunately, television can give people an unrealistic idea of house flipping. For example, on TV, none of the reality
flippers are shown analyzing the market, paying attention to the consumer price index, etc. Their flips are for a television program, streamlined for the cameras. No doubt, they analyze the same things I explore in the book—but you just don’t see that.
ANALYZE THAT
What to look for in a house-flipping market analysis
1. Fast home sales. Are houses getting multiple offers on the same day it lists or you host an open house? How many days, on average, are homes on the market before they sell?
2. Are buyers trying to be competitive with cash-only deals or signing contracts without home inspections? Without contingencies?
3. Older homeowners? Older neighborhoods? Sometimes a whole neighborhood, in essence, is ripe for a flip. Older homeowners have raised their children and are looking to downsize or take off for Florida or the retirement city of their dreams.
4. Good schools. Good town. Good amenities. Low crime. We’ll get into this in letter Z, but homeowners are looking for features in a town. Are houses walking distance from dining or shopping? Is there a neighborhood feel
? Are the town’s areas well kept and well lit? Is it located near main thoroughfares or highways leading to large employers in the area?
It’s almost like the stock market (except, honestly, the returns on investing in house flipping can be much higher). You are analyzing not just the house itself, but the market, and you are watching for trends, just like in the stock market.
sec01B
Brokers
The topic of brokers—should you become one, should you develop an exclusive relationship with one—is important for anyone entering house flipping or considering investing.
One of the more interesting things to consider is what the real estate market might look like in a decade. Will there even be real estate agents in ten years? As it is now, the version of real estate agent we usually think of might disappear because there are so many newer services, such as Zillow, Opendoor, and—I am sure as I am writing this—new, emerging