The Deal Vault
In this episode of The Deal Vault, Greg and Sarah are joined by lending expert Nate for a "put it all together" breakdown of the BRRRR strategy — buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat — which they only half-jokingly call the golden goose of real estate investing. After a lighthearted warm-up trading stories about their first jobs, the trio digs into why BRRRR is what most investors are actually trying to do, and how it lets you recycle the same dollars into deal after deal instead of bolting your cash to the walls of a single turnkey rental. Using deliberately simple, no-calculator math, they walk a single $100,000 purchase with $25,000 in rehab all the way through to a cash-out refinance, showing how an investor can recoup their entire initial investment and end up with a freshly renovated, cash-flowing property for close to zero net out of pocket. Along the way they get into cost basis and its loan limitations, why the lender you use for the refinance depends on the specific deal, how underwriting has loosened so you can refinance before a tenant moves in, and why the smartest place to run this play is a B or C class neighborhood rather than an A-class one. You'll Learn How To: * Recycle the same capital across multiple deals instead of tying it up in one turnkey property * Structure the buy and rehab with as little as 10% down and 100% of the rehab held in escrow * Track your cash all the way to the final refinance and understand what's left in the deal * Navigate cost basis rules and pick the right refinance lender for your specific situation * Target the right neighborhood class and rehab budget so the numbers actually support a full cash-out Who This Episode Is For: * Turnkey investors who want to grow faster than one property a year * W-2 earners looking to build a rental portfolio with limited upfront cash * New investors who want a plain-English walkthrough of the BRRRR numbers * Investors confused by cost basis, LTV, and refinance timing rules * Anyone weighing sweat equity against a hands-off turnkey purchase Episode Highlights [0:03] –Greg opens the vault and introduces the "put it all together" episode with Nate and Sarah [0:25] –A first-jobs warm-up: Tumble Drum kitchens, movie theaters, and Bob Evans waitressing [6:52] –Framing BRRRR as the golden goose that ties rehab and long-term hold together [8:05] –Why roughly 75% of the team's loans involve at least one step of the BRRRR process [9:38] –The real trade-off: BRRRR is cheaper in cash but costs more in time, effort, and stress [10:11] –Breaking down the acronym: buy, rehab, rent, refinance, and the easy-to-forget repeat [11:47] –The three ways to fund a buy and rehab, from all cash to local money to hard money [12:34] –The hard-money option: as little as 10% down with 100% of rehab held in escrow [14:09] –Simple math begins: $100K purchase, $25K rehab, $10K of your own cash into the deal [15:44] –A real investor example: using rehab to do two deals a year instead of one turnkey [16:44] –Comparing the BRRRR deal to a $200K turnkey with $40K–$50K locked in the walls [19:18] –The refinance step and how cost basis can cap the loan you qualify for [20:29] –Choosing a lender by the deal: paying a hair more in rate to skip a 9-month hold [21:44] –Running the payoff math: a $150K loan, the $115K owed, and cash left after closing [23:25] –The golden-goose payoff: money recouped, new roof and systems, and monthly cash flow [25:41] –Why a true zero-cost BRRRR produces an effectively infinite return [26:21] –How underwriting loosened so you can refinance before the property is even rented [28:14] –Why lenders now trust the "paint is still drying" story when rent is clearly lined up [29:35] –Picking the right market and a contractor to keep sweat equity manageable [30:45] –The rehab rule of thumb: aim for under 50% of purchase price [31:25] –Why B and C class neighborhoods beat A-class for making the BRRRR numbers work [32:50] –Cost basis explained: why an appraisal alone won't unlock unlimited loan proceeds [34:24] –The takeaway: find a lender who specializes in refinances and keep them on speed dial [36:14] –Closing recap: buy, renovate, add value, place a tenant, refinance, and repeat Key Takeaways 1. BRRRR lets you recycle the same cash into deal after deal. In a clean example, an investor puts in about $10,000, and after the cash-out refinance walks away having recouped that money with a renovated, cash-flowing property to show for it. 2. The strategy trades cash for time. It requires less money up front than a turnkey purchase but demands more time, effort, and tolerance for stress, so the right question is which resource — cash or bandwidth — you have more of. 3. Cost basis sets a ceiling on your loan. Purchase price plus rehab is your cost basis, and how long you've owned the property determines whether you can borrow above 100% of it, which is why the right refinance lender depends on the specific deal. 4. Underwriting has loosened on the rent step. Many lenders will now let you refinance before a tenant physically moves in, as long as you can show completed rehab and a property that's listed and lined up to rent. 5. Neighborhood class drives whether the numbers work. B and C class properties let you raise the after-repair value and still cash flow, whereas A-class deals usually leave money trapped or push you toward flipping instead. 6. Keep your rehab budget in check. Aiming for a rehab under 50% of the purchase price, plus a liquidity cushion for surprises, keeps a first-timer's project manageable. Connect & Learn More Fund your next deal with LoanBidz — https://loanbidz.com [https://loanbidz.com] Call to Action If you found value in today's episode, subscribe, share it with another investor, and leave a review. And if BRRRR still feels a little behind the veil, give this one a second or third listen — or just reach out and let the team walk you through your specific deal. Until next time—keep building. Keep investing.
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