Quick Read
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Buyers can purchase their first home like an investment property using owner-occupant financing rates and lower down payments, then convert it to a rental.
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First-time landlords should establish an LLC for each property before closing to shield personal assets from tenant liability claims and avoid triggering due-on-sale clauses that could force immediate loan repayment.
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“The right to assign the contract” gives real estate buyers more flexibility.
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Owning rental property can be a great income stream, but getting started isn’t easy. The Retire SMART Podcast recently offered tips for first-time landlords.
Step 1: Buy the starter home like it is your first rental
“If you’ve never had a rental property, [and] if you’re buying your first house, buy it knowing you’d be willing to rent it in 5 to 7 years,” the podcast host advised. Think of your first home as “an investment property” rather than a forever home. Live in it long enough to build equity, then you can “step out of it and you automatically have your first rental.”
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A primary-residence mortgage carries a lower rate and smaller down payment than an investment-property loan. Living there for the lender’s required occupancy period lets you finance on owner-occupant terms, then convert it to a rental once your income climbs and you can buy the house you really want. The host says he has helped several employees buy their first home using exactly this approach.
One caller flagged a potential trap. Have your attorney check with the covenants in the area because some homeowner associations (HOAs) prohibit rentals outright. Some coops also prohibit rentals or restrict the time you’re allowed to rent your unit.
Step 2: The right to assign the contract
Real estate contracts are “written in whose favor?,” the host asked. “Whoever’s presenting the contract, typically the seller.” He suggested every offer include “the right to assign the contract.” That clause gives you “an out built in … I wanna be able to walk away from that contract if I choose to.”

