Debunking The Myth That Renovating Real Estate Is The Best Path To Equity

04/12/2024 15 min
Debunking The Myth That Renovating Real Estate Is The Best Path To Equity

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Episode Synopsis

 Are you ready to rethink everything you thought you knew about creating equity in real estate? In Episode 2075, Steven Jack Butala and Jill DeWit bust one of the biggest myths in the business: that improving real estate is the best way to build equity. Spoiler alert—it’s not. This week is all about tackling the top myths we hear at Land Academy, and today’s topic is one of our favorites.We’ll dive deep into real stories, like Kimberly’s journey of pricing a property, neighbor letters, and strategies that work in the real world. From understanding market data to exploring the power of off-market deals, this episode is packed with insights to help you work smarter, not harder.Tune in as we uncover why buying property below market value beats renovations every time and how this simple principle can fast-track your path to wealth. Let’s get into it!---Listen to the podcast here Debunking The Myth That Renovating Real Estate Is The Best Path To EquityIs Improving Real Estate The Best Way To Create Equity?You are tuning in to episode number 2075. All week, we are debunking or dispelling myths. In this episode, the myth is that improving real estate is the best way to create equity. I had to pick my favorite five. This is one of my favorites. There are a lot of myths in real estate. We could do another entire week on the myths that I said about how I can't fit them in.You came up with the whole theme for the week. I remember you popping in whatever room I was in. You were like, “Can you give me a couple without thinking about it too hard and brain dump?” I was like, “I got some.”This whole week is about myths, but it could be easily called the top five questions we get at Land Academy. Each day on the show, we answer a question from our Land Academy Member Discord forum and take a deep dive into land-related topics by popular requests. This is long, but it's worth it.It's a little conversation. Kimberly wrote something. She got an answer back and she wrote an answer back. It’s long.It’s a story and it ends beautifully.I'm going to read it verbatim. I’m going to go right through it. Kimberly wrote, “I have a property that won't sell. Should I reduce the price? I have it listed for $15,000.” Chris wrote, “You should be determining the market price based on like-kind comps in the immediate area, not assessed values. Those are used by the county for tax purposes.Generally speaking, your selling price should be at or below market price to move the property. As for neighbor letter pricing, are you planning to list with an agent or sell yourself? What is it going to cost to market and sell it? Discount your price by what those costs would be, and send the neighbors a letter with your neighborly price and a deadline for taking action before you list it on the market.” Kimberly wrote back, “I got it for $1,500. There are 2 properties down for sale at $14,000 right now with the same acreage and same everything. I'm sending neighbor letters as soon as I get the deed back in my hands. I was going to sell it myself since it's such a low-cost property.”Rebecca wrote, “How long has the property been for sale on the market? Has the asking price on the listing gone down over time? How many views and saves on Zillow? Actual sold prices of similar property are a more accurate reflection of market value than asking prices.” Kimberly wrote, “It has been on the market for a long time now. I was thinking of listing it for $7,000, which would quadruple my investment.”The Value Of Data-Driven Decisions In Real EstateThese two people are helping Kimberly, Chris and Rebecca. They are telling her to look at the data. That makes me all warm and fuzzy inside. If you dig down into the data about what's going on in the market and what's happening with the property and maybe with you personally, you're going to find the answer to everything. If you’re like, “Why am I not making as much money?” If you dig down into the data, you'll find out. You’re like,