How Mobile Home Parks Make More Money
Than Single-Family Home Investing
Just about anybody who watches late night TV, or receives email,
or reads, knows that there are hundreds of people promoting
concepts to make money in single family homes. "Buy
foreclosures", "profit from short sales", "wholesale houses" –
there are at least 1,000 different concepts. Unfortunately, the
only people who actually make money in many of these ideas are
the promoters. There are so many people chasing after
single-family homes to invest in that the market is beyond
saturated, and any profitability has been extinguished.
How about looking at something that few people are involved in
and that actually generates money for the investor – not just
the promoter? That real estate niche is mobile home parks. And
they have offered superior returns to the lucky few who
understand them for several decades.
It's all about the cap rate
Single family homes suffer from low, or often negative, "cap
rates". A "cap rate" is the actual return on the debt and equity
of the investment. A typical single family home investment of a
$100,000 house normally rents for $900 per month. However,
before you think that it's a $900 per month return on your
$100,000 investment (which is about a 10% "cap rate"), remember
that you have to take out property tax (about $200 per month),
insurance of about $100 per month, and repair and maintenance of
another $200 per month (I'm talking about those big-dollar
repairs like roofs, etc. averaged over time, too). So your net
income is only $400 per month, which is a 5% cap rate.
Mobile home parks make at least double that amount. Good mobile
home parks have a 10% cap rate or better.
So right off the bat, mobile home parks make about 100% more per
year than single-family investments.
It's hard to push rents in single family homes
Single-family homes are plentiful. Your local newspaper is
bursting with homes for sale or rent. As a result, it is very
hard to increase rents – in fact, the norm these days is to
decrease rents with single-family homes. In many markets, there
is a terrible spiral down in rents as investors effectively bid
against each other to attract tenants.
Mobile home parks are in very limited supply, by comparison. In
most cities, you cannot obtain permits to build mobile home
parks – and you have not been able to for decades. As a result,
the supply is limited, and there are few competitive forces to
contend with.
It's another important point to note that it costs $3,000 to
move a mobile home from point A to point B. That's why 95% of
mobile homes only move one time – from factory to mobile home
park – in their entire lives. As a result, you can raise your
rent level 5% to 10% per year and not lose a single tenant. Few
tenants are willing, or able, to spend $3,000 to move their
mobile home over a $20 per month rent increase.
Single-family home investors know too much
Your average single-family home seller is pretty sophisticated.
They've bought and sold several homes, and know pretty
accurately what the correct price should be. And they normally
have debt on the house.
Mobile home park sellers are typically "mom and pop" owners, who
are very unsophisticated. They often price their park for a
fraction of what it's actually worth. And they rarely have any
debt. As a result they can often carry the financing themselves
– at below market rates and with non-recourse.
Conclusion
There is a lot more money in mobile home park investing than in
single-family home investing. That may be why there are five
publicly-traded mobile home park real estate investment trusts
(also known as REITs) and there are zero in single-family homes.
That may also explain why Sam Zell, one of the top real estate
investors in the U.S., is one of the largest owners of mobile
home parks in America – and not a single family home speculator.
If making money is your goal, you should look into mobile home
parks, and not single family homes.