Invest In Real Estate With $500 to $1000

 

How to Invest in Real Estate With $500 – $1,000

Growing up, my favorite board game was Monopoly.

I liked it because if you had $750, you could buy both of the most expensive properties on the board, Boardwalk and Park Place.

But course, Monopoly’s just a game.

Now, however, just like in Monopoly, you can access private real estate investments with only $500 – $1,000.

You Can Now Invest in Real Estate With $500 – $1,000.

In the old days, you needed a lot of money to invest in real estate.

$500 or $1,000 would not have cut it.

But thanks to advances in technology, real estate investing has become democratized.

Now, if you have $500 or $1,000 in your pocket, you can get started investing in real estate.

Here are our top 3 ways to invest in real estate with $500 – $1,000.

1. Invest with Fundrise ($500 Minimum).

I’m a landlord.  My first investment was the mythical “house hack,” a 4-unit property I purchased using FHA 3.5%-down financing.

And landlording’s great!  I still hold that 4-unit as well as another rental property, and they have been very good to me.

But landlording has a major drawback, namely, the amount of time it takes.

Time is Money.

See, I get a better financial return on my time by working on this blog you’re reading right now than I do by landlording.

I also get a better return on my time by servicing my CPA clients.

So rather than spending dozens of my valuable hours on Redfin or Zillow, viewing listings, and landlording even more properties, I’d rather take my earnings and invest it in real estate hassle-free in better deals than I could find on my own.

Enter Fundrise.

How do I do this?

By investing through Fundrise.

Fundrise is the first private market real estate investing platform.

By combining technology with new federal regulations, Fundrise lets you invest in the once-unattainable world of private investments.

Better Deals Than I Could Find On My Own.

Fundrise lets everyday investors like you and me invest in top deals across the nation — way better deals than I could find on my own.

Don’t get me wrong; I love the properties I own and landlord.

But they weren’t by any means incredible deals.

I simply didn’t have the investment capital (we’re talking 7 and 8 figures) to access top deals like Fundrise does.

 

Diversification

An extremely attractive feature of Fundrise is instant diversification.

For example, through Fundrise, I am invested in multifamily in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Michigan, South Carolina, Texas, and Virginia.

And I am also invested in loans funding deals in Los Angeles, Phoenix, and San Diego.

Economies of Scale

Also, because Fundrise invests in large assets with many units, you get economies of scale.

  • If you own a single-family home, and you lose your tenant, you’re out of luck.
  • If you own a 4-unit, and you lose a tenant, you’re still making money.
  • But if you own a 100-unit apartment building, and you lose a tenant, there’s a professional management company on-site ready to show the unit immediately to minimize your vacancy losses.

Get Started With Only $500!

This is why I love investing in Fundrise: I get to invest as little as $500 into deals previously reserved for the richest of the rich.

Fundrise also offers a money-back guarantee.

For the first 90 days of your investment, they will buy your investment back at the original investment amount if for any reason you are not satisfied.

2. Invest in REITs with Ally Invest ($100 Minimum).

REITs are companies that invest exclusively in real estate.

And for the most part, their stocks are dividend machines because in exchange for distributing almost all of their income to their shareholders, they enjoy juicy tax benefits.

You can purchase REITs through a brokerage account like Ally Invest.

3. Upgrade your spare room and list it on Airbnb.

Consumer-lending startup Earnest recently did a study of the “gig economy,” which is the new phrase for making money on the side. Earnest compared the average monthly users’ earnings on various “gig startups” such as Airbnb, Uber, Lyft, TaskRabbit, and Etsy.

And guess which users’ earnings were #1? That’s right. Airbnb. And they won by a long shot. The average Airbnb host makes more than 2x in the average month what the average Lyft driver makes.

And the beautiful thing about Airbnb is that it’s not as time-intensive as other kinds of side gigs. You are not making $X per hour, trading in hours for dollars just like at the old J-O-B. You are listing space for others to use, and as everyone knows here at Money Done Right, listing space is an amazing way to generate passive income, or income that is favorably disproportionate to the amount of time you invest in the activity.

So while Mr. Lyft Driver is spending hours driving around people in varying states of sobriety, Ms. Airbnb Host is making money in her sleep — and making twice what Mr. Lyft Driver’s making, on average.

view original

Share This!
Grow your Passive Income monthly!

Grow your Passive Income monthly!

Learn free wealth building tips and how to build steady passive income by subscribing!

You have Successfully Subscribed!