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Understanding Appreciation - Investing Real Estate Opportunities
By Steve Cook
For the last few years, most places in
the country have been experiencing tremendous appreciation in
the values of real estate. For the longest time I talked about
how my house went up in value and, daily, I hear many others
talk about how their homes have appreciated in value.
Well, I have news for you, houses do not appreciate in value.
Yes, you heard me correctly. Houses do not appreciate in value.
You probably think I’m crazy, but let me explain.
At the moment, I happen to live in one of the hottest real
estate markets in the entire country. While there are many
people out there clamoring for deals, I’m passing on deals.
While others think the market is drying up, I’m still finding
more investing real estate opportunities than I want to deal
with. How can this be, you ask?
The difference between myself and many other investors is that I
understand appreciation. I realize that houses do not go up in
value. It is the land that the home is sitting on that
appreciates, not the house itself. The house itself actually
goes down in value. It will maintain value if you keep it up,
but otherwise it goes down in value and it costs money to
maintain.
So in a hot market, I’m looking for land. I don’t care if there
is a house on it or not, I’m looking for land. Land in good
areas is like gold in investing real estate opportunities. A
home will have a piece of land that someone will want. That
person may or may not keep the house, but the real estate it
sits on is the desired asset. Because land appreciates, it is a
desired commodity in a hot market.
Here is an example of how appreciation of lands far outpaces the
appreciation of a home:
A home in a $400,000 neighborhood that is appreciating at 10%
per year goes up in value $40,000 per year. The lot next door
may be worth $120,000, but in a year it also goes up $40,000, or
33% appreciation. Hence, the increase in value is due to the
land, not the house which doesn’t go up in value. It costs the
same to build a home whether you pay $120,000 or $160,000 for
the lot. Of course there may be some changes in the cost of
lumber and materials, but this doesn’t have much of an effect on
the value of the home.
The bottom line - the house on the property is always worth the
same. You can replace it for essentially the same amount as you
can two years from now. It’s the land that goes up in value.
Once you understand this you will begin to look at investing
real estate opportunities differently. You’ll see the small
unattractive two bedroom rancher in a great neighborhood for the
land that it sits on. You’ll see the home with an extra lot
beside it as two deals. You’ll see vacant lots as gold mines
and, yes, people go after land in hot markets like the gold rush
of 1949.
Why does land appreciate? It’s a matter of supply and demand.
The areas of the country which are experiencing the highest
rates of appreciation are for the most part saturated. There is
very little land left to be developed and the populations are
growing. In some cases there is no land left and smaller cheaper
homes carry a premium because of the land they’re sitting on. If
you can pay market value for the “home,” you may actually be
getting a “land” bargain.
So when you pursue homes in very hot markets, sometimes you just
have to look at the small home for what it can become. Don’t
pull comps for the home as it is, but for what it could be. A
two bedroom rancher may be worth $350,000 on its best day, but a
new four bedroom, 2.5 bath, colonial may be worth $700,000. If
you could buy the two bedroom ranch for $300,000 or full market
value, the land beneath may be worth more when you consider the
new home that could be built on it.
So I encourage you all to open your eyes, understand
appreciation, and look at deals in a different light. For more
advice on real estate investment , keep reading all of our
articles.
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