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How Many Rental Properties Do You Need To Retire?

Article

Figure out your magic number. Is the path to retirement that simple?

If you know me, you know that I’m a big fan of real estate investing. In fact, I think it's one of the best ways for physicians to achieve financial freedom.

The passive income provided by such investments can continue flowing for your whole life, and in fact, the best investments can actually be generational--extending well beyond your own lifetime. However, the biggest benefit of real estate investing is that it can start providing cash flow immediately, and you can begin replacing some of your income right away.

I’ll go ahead and say this at the outset: there is no perfect, magic formula for how many rental properties you need in order to retire, just like there’s no perfect, magic formula for how large your stock portfolio needs to be in order to retire. There are just too many factors to consider. At the end of the day, all you can do is make a well-educated guess, use real current numbers, and look at both history and statistics.

Personally, I like to follow the acronym K.I.S.S. --Keep it Simple, Stupid. This helps me come up with a very simple, completely attainable goal.

As far as answering the question of the day - How many rental properties do you need to retire? - here’s how I go about it:

  1. Figure out how much you need in retirement to cover your monthly expenses and enjoy life a little.
  2. Figure out how much monthly cash flow you get from a typical rental unit/property.

Using those two numbers, figuring out how many rental properties you need to retire is fairly simple. To do it, you’ll just need a couple formulas:

  • Monthly amount needed for retirement ÷ Cash flow per rental property = Number of rental properties you need
  • Cash flow = Income - Expenses

For our purposes, income is mainly from rent paid for by your tenants. Expenses include the mortgage, interest, taxes, maintenance, vacancy, and a whole host of other things.

With all that in mind, let’s use an example. Imagine there’s a man looking to find out how many rental properties he needs in order to retire. We’ll call him Ronald Drump. In order to Make Retirement Great Again, he needs $8,000 per month to safely retire and have everything covered. He’s been buying up a few rental properties and notices that he averages $400 per month in cash flow per rental unit. How many properties, then, does he need to retire?

$8,000 ÷ $400 (per rental unit) = 20 units

There you have it: a nice, concrete number to shoot for. If you buy a 5-unit building that provides $400/unit in cash flow, that’s $2000 for the building. You only need three more similar buildings to reach your $8,000 goal. Passive income now covers all of your expenses!

Now, I know what some of you smart folks are thinking. You’re thinking that this is ridiculously simplistic--and you’re right. I didn’t mention anything about rent increases, leverage, tax benefits, increasing expenses, etc. But I can assure you that if you follow the rough formula and do end up with something like 20 units under your belt, you’ll have done something right.

You’ll be very close to where you need to be to retire, and like our hypothetical Mr. Drump, you’ll be well on your way to Making Retirement Great Again

.

Easy? Agree or not? Have your own thoughts,

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Victor J. Dzau, MD, gives expert advice
Victor J. Dzau, MD, gives expert advice