NotHardUp1
What? Me? Really?
The skepticism likely results from the knowledge that many landlords manage many properties and yet do not spend any significant amount of time doing it each week.
And by landlord, I mean landlord, not property developer flipping houses or rehabbing.
I worked with a program manager in my hometown who must have at least 50 properties he rented out. He had a wife and kids, was active in his church, and worked full time in an aerospace company. He didn't work late hours or all weekend.
He retained contractors or hired help to do plumbing, carpentry, and other facilities maintenance, and his properties were mostly single family dwellings.
He was not a slum lord.
My great grandfather had 40 or more rent houses. He was a bit of a slum lord. He bought houses while working full time, active in his church, and a high ranking Freemason.
You can make rehabbing and expanding properties a career, but as has been said, being a landlord is simply a reference to income, not work.
And by landlord, I mean landlord, not property developer flipping houses or rehabbing.
I worked with a program manager in my hometown who must have at least 50 properties he rented out. He had a wife and kids, was active in his church, and worked full time in an aerospace company. He didn't work late hours or all weekend.
He retained contractors or hired help to do plumbing, carpentry, and other facilities maintenance, and his properties were mostly single family dwellings.
He was not a slum lord.
My great grandfather had 40 or more rent houses. He was a bit of a slum lord. He bought houses while working full time, active in his church, and a high ranking Freemason.
You can make rehabbing and expanding properties a career, but as has been said, being a landlord is simply a reference to income, not work.

