
03/25/2025 8:50am
Using Rental Properties as a College Fund for Your Kids | 20- Min Investor | EP 6
In this episode of The 20 Minute Investor, Nathan and I explore innovative personal finance strategies related to real estate investing. We discuss how rental properties can serve as a...
In this episode
In this episode of The 20 Minute Investor, Nathan and I explore innovative personal finance strategies related to real estate investing.
We discuss how rental properties can serve as a college fund, leveraging property appreciation and cash flow to fund education. Additionally, we delve into the concept of interest-only payments on primary residences, emphasizing the importance of minimizing monthly expenses to invest more in rental properties. The conversation highlights the simplicity of these strategies and the importance of personal choice in financial planning.
Chapters
00:00 – Introduction to Real Estate Investing Strategies
01:36 – Using Rental Properties as a College Fund
14:21 – Interest-Only Payments on Primary Residence
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CONTACT
Feel free to reach out to me at any of the following:
Email: aaron@aaronameen.com
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Academy: Remote Real Estate Academy
Introduction to Real Estate Investing Strategies
all right welcome back to our podcast
series the 20 minute investor where we
bring you actionable nuggets and
insights from our real estate investing
Journeys in bite-size 20-minute episodes
I’m Aaron Amin my wife and I built a
portfolio of eight cash flowing rentals
across three states while working
full-time and raising a young family and
I’m Nathan I’m a husband father a tech
executive who’s built a portfolio of
cash flowing rentals over 2,000 miles
away together we co-founded the remote
real estate Academy where we coach
investors on how to build their own
portfolios of cash flowing rentals from
anywhere in the world this week we have
a fun little Deep dive into some of the
personal finance strategies that uh Mr
Nathan here uses CU I’ve long been
fascinated by these topics and we’ve
we’ve never sat down to discuss them at
length and actually I thought it would
be fun to do it on the podcast so that
everyone can benefit from the answers
here so there’s two things that I’ve
always been struck by that you’ve done
and I think you’ve done really well and
there there’s good rationale behind them
but they’re not as obvious as people
might think so in no particular order
you tell me which one you want to jump
into first number one you have chosen to
use rental properties as a more or less
like a piggy bank or college fund using
I believe accelerated loan pay down but
I would love for you to peel back into
that and then uh second you use interest
only payments for the mortgage on your
primary residence and I’m I’m very
fascinated by both those topics so you
tell me uh which one you want to start
with let’s start with the first the less
controversial one maybe all right so the
college fund using a rental property as
a college fund how does it work and uh
why did you choose to do it so first
Using Rental Properties as a College Fund
which unfortunately I can’t for the life
of me remember where I heard this but
this is not my idea I heard this someone
said it somewhere or I read it somewhere
or saw it on some YouTube video whatever
it is when even before we purchased our
first rental property but I heard this
person it might have been brand and
Turner I don’t know I can’t remember but
the whole idea was or what I heard was
their kid was born when their kid was
born they purchased this rental property
on a 15-year mortgage and that by the
time the kid would be you know college
age that property would be paid off and
could be used as a way to fund the kids
college tuition essentially with this
rental property either by refinancing
that property and pulling a bunch of
money out for to pay for college using
the you know free you know rental income
from that property to you know monthly
income to pay for you know college or to
maybe potentially sell that property and
you know recoup the money and pay for
school so I heard that idea and I
thought it was fantastic and that’s
essentially what we did for both of our
kids um and the way I looked at it is
like I you know I can get into a rental
property for let’s call it you know
$40,000 or $50,000 down payment and over
15 20 years whatever it is 30 years
whatever your timeline is the the
property value is going to increase the
mortgage is going to get paid paid down
by your tenant and you know by the time
my kids are college age this property
will be worth and I I pulled up some
numbers here so we can go into an actual
example but this property is going to be
worth however many hundreds of thousands
of dollars which is hundreds of
thousands of dollars that I can use to
pay for this fund but for which I only
put $50,000 down of my own money whereas
the more classic uh alternative route
I’ve never remember cuz don’t use it
529b 520 what are those accounts
something like that right 520 whatever
they yeah whatever they are but like
those well yes I understand we’re going
to debate this there’s interest that
acrs over time and it compounds I
understand that but to fund a 529 to the
tune of $200,000 that’s 200,000 again
give or take the compounding interest
over time but that’s $200,000 of my own
money that I need to find every month
every year however often you want to
deposit and contribute to it
uh to fund your your your kids college
fund right so in one scenario I used
$50,000 of my own money and I got my
$200,000 or whatever for my college fund
in the other scenario I’ve had to find
160 70,000 of my own money to get to
that same $200,000 college fund so which
is better in your opinion I mean it’s
pretty straightforward to me so that’s
the whole premise behind it basically
yeah and that’s why I kind of say it’s
like a non-obvious solution but when you
model it out next to each other it it
does make sense now with a 529 account
the best of my understanding cuz I have
one uh for my daughter but I actually
after opening it kind of decided that I
that wasn’t going to be the primary
vehicle also we had three kids and
literally it would be probably
impossible based on our current income
to seed enough money into three separate
529 accounts over the next 18 years
exactly to cover whatever the cost of
college will be 18 years from now it
just mathematically doesn’t compute so
you almost need a Strate strategy that
has some type of Leverage like what you
mentioned in order to be able to afford
College in that sense but a 529 account
you invest in it it has almost similar
mechanism to a 401k where you the money
that’s invested in there you typically
can select some the target date funds
they’re more aggressive than a 401k
typically because the kids are younger
it has a 18-year Time Horizon a few
different reasons right but but it’s not
like full risk on growth stocks but it’s
also not CDs and um like the lowest
possible returns so the idea is that you
drive some sort of return over and you
and you let 18 years of compounding do
the trick but if you’re not regularly
contributing to it or if you don’t have
a really large initial contribution that
compounding is powerful but it’s not
going to be powerful enough to pay for
college if you only put $5,000 in or if
you only put you know $2,000 a year or
something it’s just not it it’s you’re
not going to get there with the
accelerated loan pay down you can
benefit from that and hopefully have the
property paid off by by the time they’re
in college but you also have cash flow
you know if the property is in fact paid
off they don’t have to sell the property
you know you could refy you could use
the cash flow there’s a number of
different ways that that asset can
provide value for your kid which of
course it’s a it’s a benefit for your
kid it’s also a benefit for you because
you didn’t have to save $200,000 or
whatever the whatever the cost of
college will be down the road didn’t
have to save $200,000 that’s true but
there’s also 15 to 20 years of me being
able to use the cash flow that it
generates so I’m getting money and not
having to put money aside to pay for
this college fund over 20 years so yeah
that’s the whole idea basically so
correct me if I’m wrong though right if
you want to pay it off in 18 years
you’re going to have to accelerate the
loan pay down which means probably
there’s like pretty thin thin cash flow
right yeah yeah exactly so this is a
time in the market thing where over even
if it’s 15 years let’s call it the lower
end your rents are going to go up you
know and it’s just the property value is
going to go up right so it’s actually
not that bad and like said I have an
example here we can dive into but that’s
the other thing that oftentimes when I
talk about this I hear people kind of
push back on or or be skeptical about
it’s technically these properties we
have put them on a 30-year mortgage but
we are making the choice of paying down
that mortgage faster so that by the time
they’re college aged so 18 years 15
years depending on when you buy that
property that that property is free and
clear by the time they reach College age
and that’s primarily to give ourselves
optionality and control so I could
choose to pay down over 30 years if I
want to or I could choose to pay down
over you know 10 years or 15 or 18 or
whatever it is if I want to whereas if
you have a 15year mortgage then you have
15 years to pay pay down that mortgage
not only that but obviously maybe for
for those who looked at this before but
a 30-year mortgage your monthly payment
will be lower than a 15-year mortgage so
you get more cash flow so yeah so we do
that we could jump into the numbers here
for this one if you want I mean this is
a
run it down like let’s make it real yeah
so this is one one of the the properties
that we purchased as a college fund for
one of our kids so we bought it for1
130,000 I think if I remember correctly
so roughly let’s call it $40,000 down
payment for payment plus closing costs
or whatever so $40,000 out of pocket
right now that property generates after
all reserves all expenses all everything
set aside paid the mortgage paid
property taxes paid insurance that right
now for us generates
$430 a month of cash flow is that before
or after the accelerated principal pay
down it before the accelerated pay down
so I have $400 a month $430 a month that
I could uh choose what to do with I
could pay down the mortgage $430 you
know extra every month I could pay down
the mortgage $100 or 200 I could pick
typically what I like to do is I will
let the property cash flow for an entire
year see how much it generated and at
the end of the year when I do my books
and bookkeeping and get ready for taxes
I pick a certain number of money that
I’ll pay an extra payment for the for
the mortgage that’s how I do it I’m not
saying right or wrong but what’s more
more interesting with this is uh so the
property was purchased for
$130,000 um by year 20 I’m not saying 18
because my projection and calculator
here has year 10 and 20 so let’s say
20’s close enough by year 20 that
property uh with a relatively
conservative 3% appreciation um over the
you know year-over-year will be worth
over
$315,000 so if you pay it off in 20
years with like those additional
mortgage payments uh you know monthly
annually however you want to do it you
essentially have a a piggy bank quote
unquote of
$316 316,000 sorry dollars that you can
use for a college fund that’s a pretty
sweet college fund and it’s cash flow
and it’s it’s cash flowing absolutely
and I’m going to get to that in a second
but when you get to those paid off you
know properties
$315,000 you could sell it and yes
there’ll be taxes and fees and all that
stuff so whatever’s left becomes your
college fund you can refi pull out you
know 80% of that refinance and now you
have essentially your your college fund
through the refi because your your keep
the property and your tenants continue
to pay down this new you know loan that
you’ve taken out through the refi uh or
what you could do as well is just use
the cash flow and like right now uh cash
flow is what do I say 430 bucks a month
by the time it’s paid off in 20 years
let me do the math real quick here it
would cash flow
approximately let’s say $2,000 a month
so that’s with the with no principal and
interest anymore and um yeah so the
gross 24 yeah so gross future rents
would be400 but then take you know
property taxes Insurance you’re still
going to have to pay those Property
Management fees things like that uh so
roughly it would be net $2,000 a month
of cash flow which maybe use that for
the college fund right to pay for
college so um and all of that is $40,000
out of pocket not 250 or whatever would
be needed to compound to the 315 that I
said um and all while you know getting
20 years of cash flow right on this and
you’re not having to contribute money
out of your paychecks every year to
continue to grow and acrw the money that
you know would go into that piggy bank
that’s the thing with the 529 if you
don’t continue to contribute to it in a
meaningful way doesn’t matter the
compounding 18 years or not and how well
the those positions perform if you have
$2,000 in your 529 it’s not going to be
worth $300,000 in 18 years it’s just not
so um yeah it’s a pretty strong AR yeah
the other way I look at it is basically
having you know tenants pay for kids
college I like that idea yeah while
providing them a nice place to live and
maybe also your kids this is a whole
separate episode but your kids might be
inclined towards at least learning or
understanding the power of real estate
investing if they see that this one
single house paid for their entire
College whether or not they’re
interested in becoming landlords or
20-minute investors or not at a minimum
they’ll understand or Draw some parallel
between this asset and this outcome
which is a cool yeah my seven-year-old
has already started asking questions
about this stuff CU he sees me do this
thing sitting next to them in the
morning while I drink my coffee and they
have their breakfast and I do my 20
minutes a day of real estate stuff and
um they ask me questions so they’re
already getting exposed and you know I
can explain and talk to some of this
stuff so absolutely right that I love
that all right well we only have 5
minutes left for what you call the more
controversial topic which is the uh only
payments on the primary residence so
let’s see what we can unpack in five
minutes yeah I mean I think because it’s
primary residence every situation is you
know different it’s individual to the
person the family the situation or
whatever this is what we chose to do not
right or wrong it’s just our preferred
uh or our choices and our preferred way
to go about this and it’s actually
pretty straightforward like there’s a
few things that went into our you know
ultimately deciding to go about it this
way is one we’re my wife and I are very
confident that this is not going to be
our forever home where we retire where
we live forever so in that sense owning
a house you know um you know flat out
maybe not the best thing to do uh I was
say maybe more importantly I don’t know
if it’s more important or not but one of
the things that we were trying to do is
to minimize and lower as much as we
possibly can our monthly expenses so
that we can take whatever’s left and put
it into rental uh real estate so Buy in
you know more rentals and more real
estate to ultimately give ourselves a
better future so instead of having a
super high mortgage because I’m in the
Bay Area you know expensive homes and
all this stuff uh much rather have a
lower one for a property that we’re not
going to you know spend the rest of our
lives in but in the meantime buy more
rental properties and the way I thought
Interest-Only Payments on Primary Residence
about it is like you know we’re buying
more rental properties that are
generating cash flow with the what we
are not putting towards an AM iing
mortgage that if we change our minds in
you know 5 10 15 years and be like no we
absolutely want to stay here forever we
have a rental portfolio that we can
leverage to pay down this primary
residence of ours or sell a rental to
pay for part of our mortgage so we have
optionality again whereas if we were
maxing out our monthly expenses because
we had an advertising mortgage and not
be able to purchase rentals on the side
then we wouldn’t have the optionality so
that’s really what it is I think it’s
pretty simple at the surface when you
explain it like that one question about
the these products I think most people
don’t even consider or think about the
idea of an interest only payment on a
primary residence is this a common
product is this how long is the interest
only period is this something anybody
could go find at their local credit
union or how how does it work very
common uh you can find it anywhere banks
credit unions you know mortgage brokers
you ask you just tell them that that’s
what you want it’s nonobvious to people
right this idea of doing interest only
pay so like is there a certain period
fixed period of time that you have
interest only yeah so so you could
choose there’s you know 3 years 5 years
7 years 10 years 15 years you can find
whatever they don’t typically do 30 that
I’ve seen at least they don’t typically
do 30-year like interest only you know
mortgages or loans uh but you have other
options 10 7even five you know I think
I’ve seen three as well so you could
pick and choose yes you take the risk
that you know whatever that length of
the term is if you’re still in the
property you need need to either need to
refinance to another interest only loan
and the interest rates will be whatever
they are then uh or you sell or you move
or whatever so that’s a risk you’re
taking but I think it’s
also and maybe because both my wife and
I grew up in Europe so my wife’s French
I grew up in Switzerland and I think
there’s a very different mindset in
Europe as well around all this stuff and
what I’ve noticed like
culturally in the United States it feels
very much like for most people a goal in
life is to pay off their home home and
own their home you know flat out in
Europe it’s diametrically opposed it’s
like nobody ever cares or wants to own
their home the bank always they have
payments their entire lives uh and you
just pay your mortgage and it’s pretty
much interest only the entire lives and
they don’t you know own the house flat
out ever just refinance you know every
every time you need to so I think we
also grew up getting accustomed to that
maybe which makes it easier for us to do
here I don’t know no it’s it’s it’s
interesting to think about the different
perspectives people have across the
world my family’s from uh my dad’s side
of the family is from Bangladesh same
thing home ownership is thought about
completely differently there and the
idea of appreciation and all these
different like leveraging loan products
is just not it’s not part of the way
people think and if it is it’s different
it’s it’s a different attitude so
there’s that perspective element and
then also I ran this numbers two days
ago I looked back at 2024 and I looked
at the principal pay down on my rental
portfolio and tenants had paid down
$33,000 in principal in 2024 and when I
think about that the idea of okay well
like I I think I only paid down
something like $2,800 of principle on my
primary or something insane because
we’re at the year one of a new loan at a
high interest rate and um I’m like okay
well which one’s more powerful in the
long run and would it actually be to
your point more impactful if we didn’t
make those those smaller principal
payments it had a lower monthly payment
that we could then use to reinvest back
into things that we already know how to
do so I love the logic behind it I think
it’s the theme of this is that it’s
actually simpler the math behind both of
the things we talked about today are
actually simpler than most people
realize it’s just not obvious these
aren’t obvious things that are talked
about openly they all come with their
risks for sure and they all come with
like different downsides to consider and
be aware of but at the end of the day
the math is pretty is pretty it speaks
for itself yeah and I’m sure somebody’s
going to you know comment or you know
take the opposing opinion and that’s why
I said you know fine I’m not saying
right or wrong but it’s personal and
individual right that’s what works for
us and then for somebody else something
else might work right but it is I think
to your point of what you’re saying it
it is an option that people should be
aware of so that they can think about
their life finances goals you know
holistically yeah 100% well thanks for
peeling back the curtain and letting us
see a little bit behind the logic of
these decisions I know they’re like you
said they’re personal finance decisions
but I learned a lot you know when we
first talked about it and I learned even
more from this conversation so
appreciate it and uh we will see
everyone again next week sounds good
take care thank you for making it to the
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