I began to watch you last week and since then have been checking out the mobile home market in my area. Yes, there are some very low cost and even free mobile homes available and they are older units and look horrible. However, after watching this video I now believe they _may_ have some potential with the right repairs and minimal upgrades. Thanks for the insight. More like this please.
That's a nice stove! I usually prefer gas ovens, but that is a nice one. I lived in a mobile home years ago, they are okay if like a traditional house, they're in good shape.
@@40EntrepreneurDrive some of them are,but most of them just need A LOT of work..but it's$ 3,500/4,000 to move it 50 miles.... sometimes they are so broken down they may not survive the move...just have to count the cost of it and see if it is wise for you.... "hypothetically" if you moved a Mobile home in bad shape it cost $4000 ( if you plan on selling it all cash let's assume you have your own property to fix it up on) estimates done and it may cost $6,000 to get everything fixed to make it livable and that's already $10,000 .now those upfront cost.....SHEESH! 🙄 and then times are tough right now inflation is real...even in Alabama!
Would it help Taylor to have one of those gimbal gadgets? It’ll help her keep steady. Otherwise she’s doing a good job!! I enjoy seeing her helping out and learning.
Love that your daughter is helping you but it was very hard to view this video with all the constant moving of the camera and the lighting. This is very important info to your round up family. Just my thoughts respectfully. Thanks for all that you give Kris, we appreciate you very much.
I'm also in NC and just invested in my first mobile home, learning a lot by doing the work myself, along with help from family. Will put in about $8k-$10k by the time I'm done, on top of the $3,000 I paid for the home. It's a big 3br/2bth that I'm actually putting in better materials than factory on the subfloor, insulation, floor, cabinets, etc. Haven't decided if I should sell or rent yet b/c I'd hate to get rid of it since it'll be pretty solid once done. I think her $4k-$5k estimate to get all the repairs done between labor & materials is way off the mark, unless they are doing the bare minimum and making nightmare repairs as I've already experienced in the home I bought myself. I was shown pictures of it being repaired 10 months ago, and if i was the renter they had in there I would've called the city and filed a claim or reported them b/c of the horrible job they did, and all the nasty stuff I've found while taking things apart. I do appreciate the video though b/c I'm definitely learning a lot from youtube on what others are doing good or bad.
Great video! It was very informative. I would like more info on just flipping mobile homes though. I see most investors and the mobile home Gurus on RU-vid always talk about renting them out or doing creative financing deals where they charge the end buyer $300 per month for 5 years. But I would prefer to just flip and sell them at least initially. Maybe I would do the note method later on down the road. Do you or Stephanie by chance have any detailed info on this strategy as it relates to mobile homes?
NEED HELP! what do you do if your trying to purchase a mobile home on a lot that's rented and they want a 12 month lease. What if I'm flipping the property in 90 days??
hey, thnx for letting us know, here's the correct link for Stephanie's training mcanuffgroup--krish.thrivecart.com/mobile-home-training/, thnx for supporting our mission.
Oh! So she's not interested in bringing in new appliances for her rental, but at the same time she renovating the trailer home?🤔 So if you are renovating the whole trailer home, it should also have new appliances🤔 I know I would not wanna cook on that nasty 1971 stove that been sitting in that trailer over 51 yrs..🤦🤷 If you clean it out, or not, I don't want it. She's very knowledgeable and educated in the mobile home industry tho!