We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode $12,000/Month Cash Flow by Cracking the Rental "Formula"

$12,000/Month Cash Flow by Cracking the Rental "Formula"

2025/6/30
logo of podcast BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast

BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
A
Andre Taylor
Topics
Andre Taylor: 我从小就受到母亲的影响,她一直鼓励我购买房地产。大学毕业后,我努力偿还债务并学习木工,为购买第一套房产做准备。2007年,我以非常优惠的价格购买了一处需要大量维修的止赎双拼房。在closing前一天,我发现铜管被盗,因此我与银行协商降低了房价。当时我银行里只有3000美元,最终花了2800美元完成了交易。我通过自己的努力对房产进行了大量的装修和修缮。2008年,我购买了第二处房产,并开始思考我的财务自由目标。我需要计算出我的“自由数字”,以便了解我需要多少房产才能实现财务自由。我设定了每月1万美元的被动收入目标,并计算出我需要大约32个单元来实现这个目标。休息了八到十年后,我重新调整了心态,决定继续追求财务自由的目标。我想要实现财务和时间自由,达到32个单元的目标。我放弃了在拉斯维加斯工作的机会,回到了圣路易斯,并购买了一个四单元和一个双单元。我在Redfin和Realtor上找到了一个四单元和一个双单元的房产。在四单元房产的交易中,我遇到了卖方在恐怖分子观察名单上的问题。最终,我还是完成了这笔交易。在购买了六个单元后,我积极地寻找更多的房产。我以6万美元的价格购买了一栋被查封的双拼房,但后来发现里面有黑霉。我决定自己修复这栋有黑霉的房产,彻底清理了这栋建筑,只剩下了地板托梁。我将这栋建筑改造成了一栋单户住宅,并获得了房地产执照,计划将其出售。我将这栋房产装修成Airbnb,并获得了很好的收益。通过Facebook Marketplace以35,000美元的价格购买了另一栋双拼房,计划进行翻新。我现在已经达到了32个单元的目标,每月现金流达到12,000到14,000美元。我卖掉了大部分房产,获得了约25万美元的利润。出售房产是为了获得资金,以便购买更大的房产。我原本有机会在圣路易斯购买一个32单元的公寓,但最终还是决定回到芝加哥。芝加哥的房产在数字上更具吸引力,而且我想回到我的家乡。我在芝加哥寻找六单元的建筑,并在45天内完成了1031交易。我在Realtor.com上找到了两栋被低估的六单元建筑,我认为这些建筑被低估了,因为我可以提高租金到市场价值。我以25%的首付购买了两栋六单元建筑,并以3.6%的五年固定利率完成了这两栋建筑的交易。其中一栋建筑,我们称之为泰姬陵,正在进行翻新,租金收入潜力巨大,预计每月租金收入将达到9900美元。我计划购买泰姬陵旁边的其他建筑,因为最好的房地产就是你旁边的房地产。我购买了泰姬陵旁边的一栋建筑,称之为自由塔,因为它帮助我达到了1万美元的现金流目标。我与自由塔的业主建立了友谊,并最终购买了这栋建筑。我在2023年4月购买了自由塔。我在圣路易斯翻新了一栋双拼房,并增加了一个地下室公寓,使我达到了21个单元。我给泰姬陵另一侧的两栋建筑的业主写了一封信,表达了购买意愿。业主回应了我,并表示愿意出售。我使用商业信用额度和泰姬陵的股权来帮助我完成新的房产交易。我即将完成对五单元建筑的交易,这将使我的单元总数达到32个。我之所以能够完成这些交易,是因为我还在工作。我有一份很好的工作,收入很高,这让我在财务上能够更从容地实现财务自由。我计划在50岁之前退休,并且不急于求成。我一直采取缓慢而稳定的方法,保持工作,保持贷款能力,获得传统的抵押贷款,这对我很有帮助。我没有使用任何特殊的技巧,只是利用信用卡、401k和房产升值来实现我的目标。

Deep Dive

Chapters
Andre Taylor, a real estate investor, shares his inspiring journey from a small initial investment to achieving a remarkable $12,000 monthly cash flow. He emphasizes the importance of setting a financial freedom goal and working backward to achieve it, even after taking a decade-long break from investing.
  • Started with $3,000 and a duplex in St. Louis.
  • Calculated his "freedom number" to determine the necessary number of rental units.
  • Took a 10-year break from investing before resuming with a renewed focus.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

This investor found a real estate formula that worked so well, he bought five nearly identical properties all on the same block. Now, he's cash-lowing $12,000 per month and plans to retire before age 50. On today's episode, he'll explain exactly how he did it. Hey everyone, I'm Dave Meyer, head of real estate investing at BiggerPockets, where we teach you how to achieve financial freedom through rental properties.

Today on the show, we're bringing you the story of investor Andre Taylor. Andre made his first investment in St. Louis back in 2007 and then took nearly a full decade off from acquiring new properties because sometimes life just gets in the way. But eventually he got back in the game. He moved to Chicago where he developed a new investing formula that perfectly aligned with the goals he'd set many years earlier.

Andre was so committed to this strategy that he now owns five very similar buildings all on the same block. And this is a really cool story because it's a story of an investor who set a goal at the start of his career for exactly how many units he needed to achieve financial freedom. And he stayed determined to achieve that goal, even as he worked a day job and saved his money one property at a time. Now he's reached it and is financially set for life.

We can all learn a lot from this super fun and valuable lesson from Andre, so let's bring him on. Andre, welcome to the BiggerPockets podcast. Thanks for joining us. Oh, it's a pleasure. So honored to be here with you, Dave, and the whole BP community. Yeah, this is going to be a fun episode for you because you have a really interesting story and I'm excited to get into it, but let's...

just get the background. How did you first start investing in real estate? My mom actually put real estate in me at a young age. So she always would tell me, buy real estate. When you grow up, buy real estate. And fast forward, when I undergraduate in 2005, I was moving to St. Louis. So she was like, go to St. Louis, make your money, travel the world, buy real estate.

I was a college student, so I had to pay off debt. So from 2005 to 2007, I was saving, paying off my debt, went to carpentry school as well too, and leading up to me purchasing my first property, which was a duplex in July of 2007. And were you working full-time at this time or were you just doing real estate?

So I have my degrees in electrical engineering. I got a job right out of school with an aerospace company in St. Louis. So I moved to St. Louis like two weeks after I graduated in May 2005. Still with the company 20 years later. Oh, very cool. Nice. Yeah.

Yeah. So tell me about your deal. You bought a duplex. Yes. How'd that go? It was actually a foreclosure. It was purchased a year prior for $115,000. It was in foreclosure for $89,000. I used, at that time, it was like a first time home buyer with 3% now. And so the day before we closed on it, my real estate agent called me up and said, hey, what

wasn't there water running when we did the inspection? I said, yeah. She said, I think the copper pipes are stolen. And so somebody came in, took the copper pipes. So I went back to the bank and we got the price down to $75,000. So I bought the duplex for pretty much $75,000. Wow.

Yeah, it was. Yes, it was. Yes, it was. I had to bring $2,800 to the closing table and I only had $3,000 in the bank. So, yeah, it was crazy. So what do you have to do to this property? I mean, obviously, reinstall some pipes, but how much other work was it? It was a lot of cosmetic projects.

From July of 2007 until January 1st, 2008, when I got my first rent check, first tenant moving in, it was back and forth, sweat equity that we were painting, installing cabinets, tile, those different things.

And then was it just one deal that you bought in St. Louis? So I bought a second deal in December 2008. I bought another duplex, maybe three blocks away from the first one. And I bought it for $80,000. And at that point, did you have a goal for real estate or was it just something you did on the side? So my real estate agent, her husband, who actually owned property as such, and they said, Andre, you need to figure out your freedom number.

And I said, freedom number. And they said, yes, you need to figure out your freedom number because then you can work your way back and understand how many doors you need to get to get to that number. And I said, OK. And so at the time, you know, you read Rich Dad, Poor Dad and knowing that and Robert Kiyosaki, him and his wife, when they walked away, it was 10,000 a month residual income they had. So I said 10,000 a month. I want, you know, 10,000 months. Say, OK, we'll figure it out. And so I think I was averaging about 300, $325 cash flow from each number.

one of my units of both my duplexes. And so I just took 10,000 divided by 325 and it was like, okay, you need about 32 doors to get to your freedom number. So the goal set forth was like 32 doors. Got to get to 32 doors. That...

idea of coming up with a goal and working backwards to what you have to do is probably the single best thing any new investor can do. And so few people do it. I encourage everyone who is listening to that, do exactly this. Figure out what you actually need and work backwards. It will help every single decision that you make as a real estate investor going forward. It will get easier if you just go do this.

because you'll be figure out what price point to buy out, what markets to use, what strategies to use, how much leverage to use. All those decisions will get easier if you could just figure it out. So what brought you back? You took what, an eight, 10 year break? What brought you back to the game? It was kind of like I had to recalibrate my mind and real estate came back around because I wasn't finished with what I set out years ago to do, which was

Andre, you want that financial and time freedom? 32 doors and such. So at that time in 2017, I was living in Vegas and my manager was saying, hey, we want you to stay out here permanent versus move back to St. Louis.

And if you do, there's this per diem stipend that you'll get extra $2,000 a month. For gambling to take to the tables. Yeah, you know, exactly, exactly. And I was really considering it because I had coworkers say, hey, the $2,000, I take that and pay my house and my

card note and my salary. I do whatever. So I was close to selling my two duplexes and I was going to reinvest the money and go into purchasing a laundromat. And I sat at the pool. I remember I sat at the pool. I said, you didn't finish what you started. Go back. And so I went in and I said, hey, I'm going back to St. Louis. No. And then I had bought, I actually came out the gate buying in 2018, a four unit and a duplex on the same day I closed on.

Oh, nice. That's awesome. Well, I want to hear about those deals, but I just want to mention that I think your story is very relatable. A lot of people who...

get into real estate, I think we're just entrepreneurial by nature and by spirit. And I have this myself, like there's so many shiny objects, you know, you're like talking about a laundromat or an app or like all these things. If you have that entrepreneurial spirit, it can be very, very tempting to sort of like go out and try and do things. And

And sometimes you do have to go try out a bunch of things to see what you're good at and see what you like. But I do agree, like over time, you do have to sort of come back to what you're actually good at and settle down and not just be dabbling in all of these different things and just like focus on one good thing. So I want to hear how you started pursuing this freedom number again. But we do have to take a quick break. So we'll be right back.

Let's talk about a real estate-backed investment with major tax advantages, car washes. PBR's Opportunity Fund offers accredited investors access to a high-margin, recession-resistant industry with passive income, tax efficiency, and significant upside potential. With operations in prime locations using best-in-class technology managed via a vertically integrated team, this fund is designed to deliver strong, stable returns.

Backed by over $1 billion in assets under management, PPR has provided passive returns to thousands of investors since 2007. Don't miss out. Learn more today at biggerpockets.com slash PPRCAR. That's biggerpockets.com slash PPRCAR. Let's talk about a real estate-backed investment with major tax advantages.

car washes. PPR's Opportunity Fund offers accredited investors access to a high-margin, recession-resistant industry with passive income, tax efficiency, and significant upside potential. With operations in prime locations using best-in-class technology managed via a vertically integrated team, this fund is designed to deliver strong, stable returns. Backed by over $1 billion in assets under management, PPR has provided passive returns to thousands of investors since 2007.

Don't miss out. Learn more today at biggerpockets.com slash PPRCAR. That's biggerpockets.com slash PPRCAR. There's something surprising a lot of investors don't realize. Landlords actually file more insurance claims than homeowners. But most of the big traditional insurance companies, they're just not set up to handle those claims quickly or easily.

That's why so many real estate investors are switching to Steadily. They focus exclusively on landlords. So whether you got a single family rental, need a builder's risk policy for a BRRRR, or focusing on growing your portfolio, you get fast quotes, flexible coverage, and protection for property damage, liability, and loss of rental income. It's a good idea to review your rates and coverages every year on your rentals. So go get a quote in minutes at biggerpockets.com slash landlordinsurance today. Steadily, landlord insurance for the modern investor.

Have you ever had a tenant fail to pay rent? Did your bank still expect the mortgage to be paid? Nomad helps landlords avoid headaches and sleep peacefully at night. Nomad is the digital property platform that backs every lease with guaranteed rent for just 4% of monthly rent. Here's how it works. Nomad publishes your listing to 30 plus sites, so you start cash flowing fast. Then they provide 24 seven repair triage and a vendor network to make management a breeze. You get paid on the fifth of every month

no matter what. Plus, Nomad can even advance you six months of rent. So check out Nomad. Head to nomadlease.com slash BP. That's Nomad, L-E-A-S-E dot com slash BP.

Welcome back to the BiggerPockets podcast. I'm here with investor Andre Taylor. We just heard about how he took nearly 10 years off of his investing career. But Andre, now I want to hear how you got started. You teased us a little bit. You had owned four units in St. Louis. You got back into the game. You closed on six units in one day. How'd that come about? So I got on one

Redfin and Realtor because still during that time, you could find deals on Redfin and Realtor. And I found a four-unit building. It was selling for $85,000. It was in really bad shape, bad tenants or whatever, because I did go and look at it.

And then also I saw a duplex. And mind you, this four unit in this other duplex that I saw was a half a block walking distance from my first duplex. So I was trying to buy my closest. And so what I did with the four unit, I said I put down a contract to get conventional walkers.

financing for that 20%. And then with the duplex, I did FHA. And so that's how I closed. So the four unit, it was pretty interesting because the day of the closing, we're sitting at the closing table and then they say, we can't fund this deal because the seller is on the terrorist watch list. What?

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That is a new one on me. Okay. So I was sitting there at the closing table saying, what? Or like, okay, what do we do? And I'm not going to lie. I kind of got, I said, so if they're on the terrorist watch list, can I get the property for free? Cause they're going to get arrested or something like that.

So I don't know what happened in the background, but the next day I got keys and the deal closed. But you paid for it. Yes, I paid for it. Okay. And so now you're up to, I'm trying to keep track, you're at 10.

now, right? After on your way to 32. And once you did those six, how aggressively did you try and build from there? Oh, it was very aggressive. After I did the four unit and I had to put the 100,000 into getting that up to par. Now we're into the summer of 2019. I moved back and it was like this duplex building across the alley was boarded up and I always would see it. So my neighbor, he was like, hey, Andre, you might as well buy this one across the alley. And I was like, nah.

we'll see. And I kid you not two days later, I'm at work and I get the pings from Zillow, Redfin and different things that property popped up on my phone for $60,000 foreclosure as such. And I call my agent. I say, Hey, can you meet there later on when I get off around two? She said, yeah, we walk into the building. We,

both was like, okay, you just need to paint, change some fixtures. Like, cause I was thinking it was condemned inside cause it was boarded up as such. Not knowing until two weeks after I closed that the building had black mold in it. That's why. Okay. So how'd you deal with the black mold? So I said, I'm going to have to rehab this myself. And this was going to be my first fully rehab project. I've updated rental properties that I've owned, but this is going to be the first rehab.

Okay. And how'd it go? So I did get a more remediation company in there. I mean, when I say we gutted it out, gutted it to where- You have to, right? You got to. Gutted it to where just the floor joists was only in there. Literally, you can open the door and look to the basement and look all the way up to the ceiling. That's how it was just cooked. All the thing wood in there was the floor joists. So from December-

of 2020 into July of 2021, I constructed it and redid that building, made it into a single family. At that time, I had got my real estate license because I wanted to, I was going to sell it. That was going to be my first flip sale project. Okay.

Okay. Well, good for you. I mean, that sounds like a huge project, but it sounds like, again, it worked out well. The timing probably worked out well because property values just started going crazy during that time. So when I had it ready in July to sell, now this property I had was like in a C-class area such. And so I had interest in people, but they were like, oh,

And again, people are buying crazy around that time. And I'm like, I can't get this sold. It was keeping me up at night because it was like, I got a lot of debt on this. And at this point, I knew I was going to pretty much break even until I got the idea to furnish it and make it an Airbnb. Oh, okay. That work out? That went really good. I turned that into an Airbnb.

September, September, October, I made about $11,000 with that property. And when I sold the property on Halloween of 2021, the buyer was inheriting $8,000 in future bookings from me when I sold it as an Airbnb. Oh, wow. Okay. That's a pretty good way to sell it. I'm sure that helps. Yeah. It helps a bit. Yep. So take me through this. We're now in 2021. Like after the sale, where are you on your path to this freedom number? We were at 13 because I did buy a

building, another duplex building in January of 2021. It was from a wholesaler off of Facebook Marketplace. I got them down from $80,000 to $35,000. It was going to be another gut rehab project. So I had another duplex that was just sitting waiting for me to get done. So you could kind of say I had...

13 units, but two were not active. Okay. All right. Well, I want to hear about the last couple of years because it sounds like you've made some really cool progress towards your journey. We do have to take one more quick break. We'll be right back.

Want to earn passive income every month without the hassle of property management? If you're an accredited or high net worth investor, PPR Capital Management offers a proven solution. Since 2007, PPR has helped nearly 2,000 investors earn over $100 million in consistent, predictable passive returns. Headquartered just outside Philadelphia, PPR manages a $1.1 billion diversified portfolio

portfolio designed to provide steady income and long-term growth. With decades of in-house expertise, their team strategically mitigates risk to help investors achieve their financial goals. See how a PPR fund could fit into your portfolio. Visit biggerpockets.com slash PPR today. That's biggerpockets.com slash PPR. Want to earn passive income every month without the hassle of property management? If you're an accredited or high net worth investor, PPR Capital Management offers a proven solution. Since 2007, PPR has helped nearly 2,000 investors earn over

$100 million in consistent, predictable, passive returns. Headquartered just outside Philadelphia, PPR manages a $1.1 billion diversified portfolio designed to provide steady income and long-term growth. With decades of in-house expertise, their team strategically mitigates risk to help investors achieve their financial goals. See how a PPR fund could fit into your portfolio. Visit biggerpockets.com slash PPR today. That's biggerpockets.com slash PPR. If you want a short-term rental, here's something worth knowing.

Not all landlord insurance policies are built for your kind of property. But that's where Steadily comes in. Steadily offers insurance designed specifically for short-term rentals. They cover things like property damage, liability, loss of rental income, and even unexpected issues like bed bugs. Steadily only works with real estate investors, so they understand the details that make short-term rentals unique. And they've built coverages specifically for short-term rentals.

One investor pro tip I always like to give out is to review your rates and coverages every single year. So go get a quote in minutes at biggerpockets.com slash landlord insurance today. Steadily.

Rental property insurance for the modern investor. Real talk here. Are you tired of chasing rent? Or have you ever had a situation where the tenant doesn't pay, but you're stuck paying your mortgage? Nomad fixes this. They guarantee your rent every month for just 4% of what you collect. And here's what's great. They post your place on 30 plus sites, handle repairs 24 seven, and you get paid on the fifth, no matter what. They can even advance you six months of rent.

So check out Nomad at nomadlease.com slash BP. That's N-O-M-A-D-L-E-A-S-E dot com slash BP. I used to think I could booby trap my house like some scene from Home Alone, but it turns out setting up swinging paint cans can be pretty messy. And so I personally turned to a much better solution, SimpliSafe.

I use it because it doesn't just react after something happens. It helps stop bad stuff before it even starts. And that's what makes it different and way easier than installing a zip line to my treehouse. SimpliSafe's new ActiveGuard outdoor protection uses smart cameras and live agents who watch over your property in real time.

So if someone's creeping around, they can talk to them, shine lights on them, and they can even call the cops if needed. It's like having a professional bouncer for your house minus the velvet rope. There are no contracts, no hidden fees, and setup is super simple. Plus CNET just named it the best home security system of 2025. And I get why. It gives me real peace of mind every single night.

Right now, you can get 50% off your new SimpliSafe system with professional monitoring and your first month free at simplisafe.com slash pockets. That's simplisafe.com slash pockets. There's no safe like SimpliSafe.

Welcome back to the BiggerPockets podcast. I'm here with investor Andre Taylor. Where we left off, you had 13 deals. Tell us where you are today because that was still like 2021-ish. So what have you been up to the last couple of years? So from 2022 up to this point, it's been crazy because now we are officially pretty much at the 32-door mark. Wait, do you just as of when most recently? This last deal? Last month. Oh my God, man. Congratulations. That's so cool.

And what's, wait, so I want to ask how you got there, but did 32, is that, is the cashflow actually what you wanted it to be? Now we're talking cashflow wise of 12 to 14,000 a month. You did it. Congratulations. That's so cool. I love that. You know, we talked to so many people on the show who,

are growing and have these numbers and usually people are on their way, but we very rarely get people who have actually hit their number. Congratulations. That's super cool. Tell us what happened. You went from 13 to 32.

Fast. So what happened was I was just bit by the commercial bug because I literally came home and I put everything up for sale. That was the whole house went up for sale, the four unit, the duplexes. Oh, I put all those up for sale. Yeah. At that time, I had seven properties. And so I put six of them up for sale because the property I bought off of Facebook Marketplace, it was gutted out. So I didn't sell that one. And I put those six up.

for sale, which I got sold by November of 2021. So I had about, after paying off a lot of expenses and stuff like that, I had about a quarter million dollars in profit. Wow. Congratulations. That's awesome. But you're going in the wrong direction, man. I thought you were going to say you started adding to your portfolio, but okay. So you started selling, did you know what you were going to buy or were you just kind of like,

I got to liquidate. I need this capital so that I can go buy something bigger. Yeah. So what happened was when I was getting ready to liquidate, my real estate agent, her and her husband at the time, who was my mentors, and they owned about close to 100 doors in St. Louis. So they had a 32-unit apartment complex there.

that they were selling. They would say, "Hey, why don't you buy this from us?" My finance guy, Jerome said, "Hey, why don't you stay here in the St. Louis market?" He got me in contact with US Bank and US Bank was like, "Since you're a local investor, we will only want you to put down 15% to buy this 32 unit." So, you know, at this point it's like stay in St. Louis, but then Chicago, the numbers work better with Chicago. And this is my opportunity 'cause I did want it to, you know, own back in my city.

And so there was a lot of properties are for sale. So in Chicago, you have a lot of six unit buildings. And so I look at those as the red hotels for Monopoly. So I was like, I'm going to own some six unit buildings. So I was under the gun. I was 1031, a quarter million dollars. I had 45 days to

And I did find two six-unit builders that I would want to purchase, but they fell out of contract within like two weeks as such, whatever. So it was like, yo, you got to hurry up. Yeah, that's scary. Yeah, it was very scary because I'm like, I do not want to give the government about $50,000 taxes. So I just went back to when I was studying for my real estate license in Missouri. And I remember reading something that said, realtor.com has the most listeners or whatever.

Literally, I went to realtor.com. I found two six-unit buildings selling. One was for $450,000. One was for $425,000. And again, underwriting commercial debt that I learned going to the summit with Grant Cardone, I was like, yo, these buildings are way undervalued.

I come in and bring the rents to market value. I call my age. I said, put four price offers in. Let's get it done as such or whatever. Yeah. And so I had to put down 25%. That's not bad for a six unit. Not bad at all. Yeah, that's pretty good. Really good. Because in Chicago, there's three unit buildings that sell it for $400,000. Yeah, right. So-

At the time, my finance guy in Chicago, he found me a lender up here and I closed on both of those buildings the same day. I got a five-year fix for 3.6% on both of those properties. Okay. So you sold them all. So you're back to 12, right? Back to 12 units because you just said two. Yep. Okay. How...

How have those two deals, because it sounds like you sort of bought them under the gun, which was everything in 22, right? It was so competitive. Everyone was buying. How have they performed for you? We'll talk about the one building that I bought for $450. My cousin, we call it the Taj Mahal because it's really huge. And it's the building that we're doing the renovation in that you guys will see when you get here. Just so everyone knows, Henry and I are going on

a road show and Chicago is one of the stops. July 15th, we're having a meetup in Chicago. It's free for everyone. So you guys should definitely come. If you're in the Chicago area, definitely come check it out. And one of the things we're going to do, Andre and I were talking about before the recording started, Henry and I are going to come stop by and see what Andre is up to in Chicago. So if you're in the area, we're going to have a lot of fun. It's going to be great. So come check that out. But keep going. Tell me about the Taj Mahal.

So there's a six unit building. And so the gross rents that were coming in was about $5,400, close to $900 a month average wise. And these are all two unit apartments. Square footage on those is about 1,200 plus square feet. It's really, really huge. And so the market rate for two bedrooms in this area is $1,450. And when I did the numbers and stuff, this building was like $750,000 where it should be.

So I was like, this is a no brainer and stuff. So because of the renovation that we're doing on the building, the units are in this building, we rented for $1,650. Nice. So just off pure rent, it's going to be bringing me in $9,900 gross a month, not including the garage spaces and the laundries that the tenants would be paying for in that building. Okay. And then-

Fill us in for the gaps. How'd you get back from there to now hitting your goal last month? So when I came and bought this building, there were other buildings next door to it. And I was like, I'm going to buy this block up. I said, I'm going to buy the rest of these buildings next to it as such. Because another thing that I learned early on investing is the best real estate to buy, and I say this all the time, is the real estate next door to you. So one of the buildings next door to me, which

brought me to the 18 door mark, I call it the freedom tower because it hit that number for me, the 10,000 mark as such. And so like with that,

I became real friends with the owner of the building because I would see him come over. He was an older guy. He would come over, do his lawn and different things in that nature. I said, "Hey, if you think about selling this building, here's my number. Just give me a call whenever the case." His wife called me the next day, said, "You want this building? We're selling it." Because I'm tired of him going over to that building every day to work.

This building that I'm in right now is the Freedom Tower. We met in this basement because they had a little office set up down here and we worked out the deal to purchase it. So I purchased this building April of 2023. That's awesome. Yeah. So now I go to 21 doors later on that year because my duplex building in St. Louis that I bought off Facebook Marketplace for $35,000, I started renovating that property.

we put a basement apartment in that duplex. So I had to get the zoning redone and different things of that nature. So I have the three unit building in St. Louis that took me to 21 doors. So now it's like, okay, the other two buildings that's next door to the, on the other side of the Taj Mahal, uh,

One is a six unit and one is a five unit. What I did was I looked up and coincidence is one owner who owns both the buildings, the six unit and the five unit. He lives out your way. He lives in Seattle. Oh, really? Oh, cool. Yeah, he lives in Seattle. So I wrote him a letter.

I just wrote him a letter saying, "Hey, my name is Andre Taylor. I'm an engineer. I work for this aerospace company. I'm sure you would know because it's out there in Seattle really big." I think I know which one you're talking about. Yes, exactly. Exactly. And so I said, "Listen, I own the building. I own these two buildings." I said, "I'm not looking to force you, but I do like the integrity of the block. If you ever decide to sell, please give me the first opportunity to purchase. Here's my information."

Did they ever respond to you? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He actually called me right away. This was December of 2023. He called me in January of 2024 after the holiday. He said, hey, you know, I'm actually thinking about retiring in about a year or two as such, whatever. And he was like, he said, yeah, you know, I have no problem selling it to you. You're going to own the block.

after this. You're like, yeah, that's what I'm trying to do. Yeah, exactly. And so he said, hey, I would love to meet you. I'll be in Chicago when it's warm and we'll meet. And so it went cold, Dave. He was supposed to reach out to me in May. I emailed him. I said, hey, how's it going? He said,

Nothing. So he reached out to me back in this past January. He said, hey, I'm ready to sell now. I'm like. That's just how it works though, right? It's just like you got to put the iron in the fire and wait. And like you can't rush that because especially if someone's retiring, that's going to be on their own timeline.

I used my credit business credit line, which I had no PG guarantee. I used that to help me close on the new properties and stuff. I also pulled some equity out of the Taj Mahal because the Taj Mahal was valued at $700,000 on the appraisal. Now the five unit, we actually, we closing on that soon. So we were supposed to buy both the buildings. And so he was like,

I'm waiting on to see what's going to happen with the big, beautiful bill because he like capital gains, the 100 balls depreciation. So we went back to the table. We wrote up the contract where it's the two parts. So this one is executed and we execute the second one after the big, beautiful bill comes out. So right now, 27 with that five that's going to get added on later on, which will make it 32 doors. Wow. Amazing.

Well, we do have to get out of here, Andre. We're running long, but I love this story so much. I'm happy to do it. But I just had one last question for you. So you've had this sort of interesting career. You started, you took 10 years off, then you came back to it.

You never have quit your job, right? You've stayed with your career. Is that intentional and do you think you'll keep doing that? So here's the deal. I know people always talk about this with the job. Like literally me being able to get these deals is because I still work. Don't get me wrong. I have a great job and pays very, very good and stuff.

And because of that, that strategically is going to allow me to walk away. I'm 43. I'll be, trust me, I will be done before 50. But at the same time, I don't have to rush. I'm in a stabilization mode right now. I'm not looking for no more properties. I'm stabilizing the property to get to maximize everything so I can reinvest my profits, my cash flow into the buildings to even bring them up even more and all this other stuff. So, and I can live off my W-2 money. Yeah.

So yeah, so it's like, it's no rush and stuff. I can prepare strategically on my exit. Yeah. And you'll be done by 50. That's amazing. I think that's super cool. And just a lesson to people, there's no right answer, but I do think in this industry, a lot of people over...

sell the idea of quitting when quitting has trade-offs. And I just wanted to point out to people that, Andre, you've had this super cool career. And a lot of it seems to be in part because, one, you're doing this, you're good at it and you're diligent about it. But also you've sort of like gone with the slow, steady approach of trying to, you know, keeping your job, being lendable, getting conventional mortgages, that kind of stuff really seems like it's helped your career.

your career? It definitely has. There was no special hack that I did or anything of that nature with the finance. It was just, I leveraged money off credit cards. I pulled for 401k, had money saved up, just that norm. And then of course, appreciation. Real estate is long-term, appreciation game. So it's definitely been a ride. Awesome. Well, congratulations on your success, Andre. Super cool story. Really appreciate you being here today.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Can't wait to have you guys over at the Taj Mahal. Looking forward to it. It's going to be great. And Everett, again, if you want to hang out with me, Henry, Andre, we're going to be in Chicago the night of July 15th. We have a free meetup for BiggerPockets listeners. It's going to be a great time. We're doing the Cashflow Roadshow. Stopping in Chicago. Make sure to check that out. Thanks again, Andre. And thank you all for listening. We'll see you next time.

Thank you all for listening to the BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast. Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or any other podcast platform. Our new episodes come out Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I'm the host and executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer. The show is produced by Ian Kay. Copywriting is by Calico Content, and editing is by Exodus Media. If you'd like to learn more about real estate investing or to sign up for our free newsletter, please visit www.biggerpockets.com.

The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only. All host and participant opinions are their own. Investment in any asset, real estate included, involves risk. So use your best judgment and consult with qualified advisors before investing. You should only risk capital you can afford to lose. And remember, past performance is not indicative of future results. BiggerPockets LLC disclaims all liability for direct, indirect, consequential, or other damages arising from a reliance on information presented in this podcast.