Earn Big Bucks as a Landlord

Collecting rent in some cities, like Baltimore, is a good way to make money.

ByABC News
August 2, 2009, 3:33 PM

August 2, 2009— -- Scott Patterson had his faith in the stock market severely shaken over the past year, so he decided to look around for something more solid in which to invest his retirement savings. The 43-year-old owner of a gutter-cleaning business settled last month on a three-bedroom house in Athens, Ga., which over the years has attracted a steady stream of renters from the nearby University of Georgia campus. Patterson put down 20% of the $127,000 sale price, or $25,400. After debt service, taxes, insurance and an allowance for repairs he'll clear $3,500 this year. That's a 12% return on the capital he invested (including closing costs). Depreciation deductions can shelter a good part of this from taxes.

"This just seems like a better bet right now than adding money to the IRA or SEP," he says of his retirement account alternatives.

Until the housing bubble filled investors' heads with the notion that real estate is a way to get rich quickly, the nation was populated by millions of investors, like Patterson, who valued properties based on the rent they could earn. With real estate prices down 50% or more in some areas, the landlord game is back in vogue. And like Patterson, many potential players are carefully comparing it with the returns they could reasonably expect by sticking their money in other places.

Click here to learn more about America's luckiest landlords at our partner site, Forbes.com.

Jeffrey Nimmer, 32, owns a lone one-bedroom apartment in Greensboro, N.C. that rents for $900 a month. In the past two years he has replaced the dishwasher ($500) and microwave oven ($100) and paid to have the chimney cleaned ($150). A deep cleaning, needed to attract new tenants, runs $250. "When you're a landlord, you come to expect things will go wrong. Badly wrong," he says.

Fire and liability insurance for a landlord will cost around $900 per year for an apartment building with up to four units, says Julie Parsons, vice president of Allstate's consumer household unit.