
09/12/2025 10:58am
Your First STR: Where to Buy (and What to Skip) With Kirby Atwell
In this episode of the Hybrid Real Estate Professional Podcast, we have Kirby Atwell, founder of Living Off Rentals and an Army veteran.
Kirby shares his journey from military...
In this episode
In this episode of the Hybrid Real Estate Professional Podcast, we have Kirby Atwell, founder of Living Off Rentals and an Army veteran.
Kirby shares his journey from military service to flipping over a hundred properties and his pivot to high cash flow vacation rentals. He underscores the importance of identifying personal success metrics and strategies that align with those goals.
Kirby explains his approach to short-term rentals in less competitive markets and how house hacking has significantly impacted his financial success. T
his episode provides valuable insights for anyone looking to transition into real estate investing and create multiple income streams.
00:00 Intro
00:40 Kirby’s background
03:50 Flip treadmill → lessons
17:35 First STR & 1% Net Rule
25:56 Market pick: Buy Here / Skip This
32:13 Competing: first-page strategy
36:50 Barn B&B house-hack
42:35 Leaving W-2: 8-unit plan
48:30 Takeaways & next steps
0:00
based off the 1% net rule of thumb. If I’m buying a property for $300,000, it
needs to generate $3,000 of net cash flow. After all my expenses, everything
$3,000 that I’m actually putting in my pocket. We realize if I could get to eight of these, that would would replace
my W2 income. Like that’s the freedom number.
[Music] Welcome back to the Hybrid Real Estate Professional Podcast, the show where we
help you build a life of abundance through real estate and small business investing without compromising what matters most. Today’s guest is Kirby
Kirby’s background
Atwell, an Army veteran, West Point grad, and the founder of Living Off Reynolds. After serving 11 years in the
military and earning his MBA in real estate finance, Kirby went on to flip and renovate over a 100 properties in
the Chicago area. But it was his pivot into high cash flow vacation rentals that changed everything for him. He now
lives on a 45acre farm in northern Indiana with his wife and kids, funded in part by a single 800 square ft barn
B&B, which we’ll ask him what that means in a minute, and helps others do the same through his vacation rental
investment blueprint program. We’ll talk about how Kirby left his day job to pursue real estate full-time on two
separate occasions and why the second time has been so much more successful than the first. We’ve got a lot to cover, so we’ll jump straight into it.
Kirby, welcome to the show. Erin, it’s uh awesome to be here, man. Thanks for having me. Yeah, you have a a very diverse range of
experience, and I’m excited to um you poke at a few different elements of it. But let’s kind of rewind the clock and
and start. Actually, one of the observations I’ve had with some of the most successful investors that I’ve met
are that a lot of people come out of the military and get into real estate. So, can you talk a little bit about kind of
like how you initially got exposed to the idea of real estate and and was it during your time in the military or or
how did this all kind of come to exist in the first place? Yeah, I was actually um kind of
surprised about this myself actually because I um I’ve noticed the same thing on my podcast and I’ve interviewed so
many other military uh or or veterans that had served in the military that are now in real estate and doing well. And
so, uh, you don’t think about those two skill sets as being similar, you know, like one’s more entrepreneurial and
one’s more like you follow orders and do what you’re told. And but but there is a lot of crossover. And so, uh, yeah, I
left the military in 2011. Um, I had I’d gone to West Point, like you mentioned, and I served uh, six years as as a as an
officer in the army. And while I was in the army, I picked up uh what I like to refer to as a gateway drug into real
estate investing, which is Rich Dad Poor Dad. And uh I read that book uh and like
so many others who have the same story, it’s there’s something about it that just kind of clicks in your mind and
you’re like, man, this this just makes a ton of sense. And um so at that point, I was a year out of college. This was
2006. And I read that book and I was like, this is something I can do the rest of my life, like regardless of
anything else that I’m doing. Kind of like, you know, your show, the hybrid investor, like I can hybrid this with
other activities. So, I know I’m going to be serving the army for at least the next 5 years. Um, and then after that,
you know, I can either do this full-time or or do it on the side until I’m 100 years old. You know, that’s not like uh
playing a sport or something where it’s like you have a very short window. So, I just fell in love with the idea of being
able to build cash flow and wealth over time. And so, uh, I bought a couple properties in the army, but then got out
in 2011 and I didn’t, uh, know, you know, what
direction I was going to go. I I just knew I wanted to do real estate. And I had these visions of like straight line
Flip treadmill → lessons
success, you know, like I was gonna get out of the military, just start flipping properties, doing deals, and and create
all this income and and have all this success. And that’s not how it went. Uh I can tell you it it was like many
others have experienced, it’s it it was kind of a longer road to figure out the
path, right? And so um I decided to flipping was going to be the way to go because I didn’t have a W2 job anymore.
And I went from being the commander of a homeland defense site in northern Japan. I uh had a a site where I had 100 guys
that worked for me and this billion dollar radar system and we monitored North Korea for missile activity. And I
went from that to moving into my parents’ basement and hanging up the uniform and just being some guy who’s
trying to start a a real estate investing company has never really done any deals. So, it was quite a transition
um of identity and at the same time trying to get this this this business started. And so, eventually I got one
deal going and I partnered with a couple friends of mine from high school and and then we did multiple deals at the same
time and we started to scale this flipping company and that was my first kind of fora into doing real estate
full-time. Yeah. No, that’s amazing. And you you talk about the crossover of military
skills and even in my mind discipline is probably the most translatable
characteristic of of the people that I’ve met that are um veterans that also invest because that actually and
leadership you mentioned you had 100 people reporting to you. So learning how to build culture around a team, how to
hold yourself to high standards and how to have the discipline to execute on a daily basis. Those are all skills to me
that map into real estate. even if you’re doing, you know, single family residential flips with a small team um
that aren’t coming out of the military. Um I can see how that would map over. But it’s really interesting what you said that, you know, you kind of had
this vision for a linear path and you were going to, you know, find things that fit maybe a certain buy box or
profile. I’m guessing you you you had a certain number of, hey, if I do X number of flips, it’ll give us the money we
need to maybe go buy rentals. What was like the original plan other than get out there and start doing deals?
Yeah. I wish I I I had a plan like you were kind of laying out there. Uh it
wasn’t it it wasn’t super detailed. Um and to your point too, just going back to the the the crossover or I think the
biggest um skill sets that I I developed in the military and that I see. I think
you’re right. Absolutely. The discipline to just cons consistent, you know, have consistency is a huge one. learned that
at West Point, like you know, there’s structure to every single hour, every minute of your day. Um, but then also
once I got into the military, being thrown into situations that you’re not prepared for, I think is so is such a
in at the moment it doesn’t feel like a a great thing. It doesn’t feel like it’s a benefit or something that is positive,
right? you feel like a fish out of water. But then looking back, that experience makes you so much more
prepared in the future to be able to do that. And so getting out of the military, I had gone through all these
situations where like, you know, I showed up in Japan and I was like, “All right, you’re the guy in charge here, you know, and it was like this ceremony
of like, you’re taking over as commander of this site and my boss went back to Hawaii and I had to just like figure it
out, you know, and and uh and so going getting out of the military then and
starting with real estate, I think I had an easier time like wrapping my head around this
new situation because I’d done that already and I’ I’d been exposed to those
situations in the past and I see this a lot with with um real estate investors. they kind of start in the flipping space
because it feels to to me it felt like well this is a way to generate income right like we I don’t qualify this back
2011 they didn’t have these DSCR loans that they have now which are great loans for single family to 4-unit properties
basically all that existed was conventional loans and you know a big part of that was was looking at your W2
income and I didn’t have W2 income so I was like well you know we can flip properties and so um you know my vision
was like we’ll just start turning these over quickly and we’ll just generate these big chunks of cash. And in the
beginning, you know, it actually we had success on the first few. Um, and and we
created some money, but the the problem is like you spend 6 months doing this,
going through the whole process from the buy to the rehab to the marketing and selling. And if you have some money at
the end and it does go as planned and you do make profit, which sometimes it doesn’t, uh then you you have to pay
taxes on that money and you’ve also accumulated expenses for the last 6 months that you got to pay now. And so
you’re kind of back to square one. And so we created this process of like
always just enough to get back to where we started, you know, and so we thought, well, we’ll just grow the volume and
then we’ll just grow the size of the deals. And it was, you know, we’re creating more and more overhead with it
as we were doing this. And it was always the same thing. It was like this big treadmill. And so after five years, so
so I guess to answer your question, the original goal was just to create a whole bunch of capital that we that I could
then use to um either live off of or or reinvest. And I didn’t really have a
clear plan at the time. It’s my my goal setting process has changed a lot over the years and I’ve gotten a lot more
clear on that. But um but it was after five years of doing this, I’d flipped 70
properties and I was kind of in the same place financially. You know, we had learned a lot. We had done a ton of deals. Um, but you know, it was just I
knew it was going to be this treadmill that I would never get off of if if I just stayed in the transactional space
instead of creating long-term cash flow. Yeah. You know, it’s really interesting.
Um, you mentioned that your your strategy and goal setting process has changed a lot over the years. I’m sure
it has. And I know you and I both work with new investors and kind of teach them how to get started in a couple
different strategies. I do think there is something to be said for just getting started, right? You don’t necessarily
have to have your 10-year thing figured out exactly perfectly crystal clear. Yes, that can help. And I think, you
know, um, as people who coach others, you probably encourage people to have an outcome in mind before they start, but
also like there’s a lot of people that spend their whole, you know, a year planning and and never sending a single
offer or never taking any action. So, there is something, you know, it goes back to the military characteristics. I
forget which branch in the military, so correct me if I’m wrong here, but improvise, adapt, and overcome is something I always heard. Um,
absolutely. And, uh, you know, that’s that mindset, I’m sure, serves you well. When you get started, you build, you
realize over time it’s a treadmill, but you at least are building the skills. You’re getting in the reps, you’re understanding. I’m sure every project
had its own lessons. There were some things that went really well. There’s probably some things that you wouldn’t repeat. and getting that experience gave
you the perspective to then go into the next chapter of of your your journey. And so even without, you know, a crystal
clear idea of where you’re heading, nobody can re retrace or or take away that experience that you got in that
first chapter. I don’t know if that’s how you kind of reflect on it or not, but um you that’s that’s what I hear when I when I when I tell that story.
Totally. Totally. And and I’ll Yeah. and and you know I was in the same place financially so really hadn’t created any
wealth or cash flow or anything in those five years you know we generated millions of dollars but put it all back
into the business um and so yeah financially I was in the same place but to your point I was in a much more
prepared place going forward having that perspective of all these deals and understanding you know the the
experience of going through all these different situations to where then moving forward into the next phase. I I
was so much better prepared. So, for sure, you don’t you’re never going to have it all figured out from day one. And everyone I talk to on my podcast,
it’s like they’re like, “Oh, if I just knew then what I know now.” But the only
way to know then is to go through the experience that gives you that knowledge now. Yeah. One of the things I always
encourage people to consider, uh, a lot of people want to jump straight into a specific strategy. they hear it on a
podcast or they hear other people doing it and people focus so much on the strategy before they even define like
what the outcome is that they’re looking for. I know you have four kids. I have three young kids. And um you know, for
me, a lot of what I’m trying to enable with my investing is the ability to spend time with my kids while they’re still young and in the house. And if I
built a a machine similar, like if I if I tried to do what you did and got, you
know, a high volume flipping business going, something tells me that probably wouldn’t line up with my actual goal of spending more time with my kids. So, I
think they’re all viable paths and you can build those machines. You can be profitable, but attaching it to the
actual outcome that you’re trying to enable, I think that’s that’s probably the most important mindset shift for me
around setting goals. Um, and I imagine you probably have a similar thought at this point.
Yeah. What do you think? Exactly. Oh, totally. And and it’s incredible to me too how many people
fall into a strategy and continue to do that strategy just because that’s what
they’ve always done. Even though like you said, the most important thing is identifying does this is this the
absolute best thing I can do to get to the outcome that I’m after the most
efficiently and the quickest way possible. And most of the time I see that it doesn’t line up. But people just
don’t think through that lens. are just like, well, either they they they fell into this strategy or it’s just like
something that maybe their parents did or somebody they saw do and so they they do that, but they don’t ask the question
of is there actually a better way? And I think that’s important, too. Yeah. And you can emulate people who
have success. There’s nothing wrong with that. But at some point, you have to contextualize it to your own life. I think sometimes people try and copy
paste other people’s life plans, other people’s business plans into their life, but you probably have different
circumstances. Nobody lives the same life. You know, um, variables and dynamics change over time. So, if you
try and put in a playbook that somebody used successfully in 2018, in 2025, there’s going to be differences. You’re
going to have to adapt. And that’s where having a mentor or a coach or somebody that can help you understand how to
frame that stuff and and, you know, help save you from mistakes, you know, can can really make a difference.
Totally. So before we leave the flipping chapter, I saw in your bio you you mentioned you kept some of them as
rentals. So over time, you said you did this about five years. What was the point at which you started looking, hey,
you know, I we’re going to keep this one, we’re going to sell this one. How did that thought process evolve? So I I
wish I was that smart to to have kept some of them as rentals because I look back and and I talked to
so many flippers that have the same perspective where it’s like man if I just kept one out of three right now.
Like I look at the prices that we bought them at and what we rehabbed them for and they’d be worth like triple right
now, you know. Um, but we were selling them. And the funny thing is, you know, Black Rockck was one of our ma main
buyers, you know, it was the hedge funds back at the time and and they were not doing inspections on them. Like they
were paying above what retail buyers would pay. And I’m thinking these guys,
everyone thinks they’re so smart and they’re these guys are idiots. Like they’re they’re buying these properties
that, you know, they’re not even inspect. they could like have all kinds of issues and they’re paying top dollar
and those are the guys that now are sitting on these properties that are worth three times as much. But um but
yeah, at the time we needed capital and so we we were flipping them. Um, and then in 2016 is when I kind of had this
epiphany where I was like, wait a second, like I could do this for the rest of my life and still be in the same
position or I can start buying rentals, which is what the whole reason
I got attracted to real estate. When I read Rich Dad Poor Dad, it was like you can build up these streams of income to
where at some point you don’t have to work an active job and you have so much
more flexibility. to your point, like be able to spend time with your family, which is huge uh for me as well and and
an important um uh aspect of my life and and just have a lot more flexibility and
autonomy. And so I knew that I needed to start creating those streams of income. And that’s when I kind of switched to
long-term rentals. It was after I’d flipped the 70 properties and started buying some long-term rentals at that
point. Gotcha. Yeah. You know, it’s um it is one of those things where it’s hard to
zoom out and think over a long-term time horizon. And this is another thing when
people get into real estate and they want to buy their first rental property, they get really excited about the idea and then you go buy a property and it
cash flows, you know, a net$1 or $150 a month after expenses and that excitement
wears off because you’re like, I can’t do anything with this. What am I supposed to do? And and what you have to do is keep the long
term in mind. you know, 10 years of rent growth, price appreciation, loan payown,
depreciation, all this stuff in aggregate, you know, over time is incredibly powerful. But in the moment,
the way human emotions are when we see $100 hit our bank account in 2025, it
feels insignificant. And um so yeah, I think even just coming to that realization, whatever you have to go
through to get to the point of being able to think like that, um you know, that that’s a powerful reframe I’m sure
that you know has since served you well. So you said that was about 2015. You started you getting into rentals. At
First STR & 1% Net Rule
what point, you know, kind of fast forwarding did you turn on to the idea of vacation rentals?
Yeah. So there’s a few things that happened right around that time frame um that were really important and I think
changed the trajectory of our our future. Um number one was I got married uh in 2015
um to an incredible spouse. And I think that’s probably the most important
decision you can make in your entire life. Um, you know, it’s it just impacts every single component of your life and
can impact it positively or negatively. Um, and and fortunately, um, it was one
of the best decisions I ever made. I went from basically making decisions based off of myself and
more like based off of like what I saw other successful quote unquote gurus,
you know, saying success look like, you know, it was more of like the the things, you know, it was like the the
the trappings of success. And after I got married, we started talking together and
realizing what our actual version of success was. Um, and like you said, like it’s
different for everybody, but for us, like we didn’t really care about any of that stuff. Like I don’t care if I have
a Bentley or a private jet, you know? Um, even if I I had all the money in the
world, I probably wouldn’t drive the pickup truck I drive now cuz I love it, you know? So, it’s like I that none of
that stuff is important. What was important was autonomy and making an impact on other people, too. Um, and so
we wanted to control our time and and we also wanted to live on a farm. Um, and so we got clear on this and then it gave
us a place to backwards plan from and and we realized that yeah, the the few hundred a month of net cash flow from
the long-term rentals probably wasn’t going to get us there in a time frame that that we wanted. And so we moved
from Chicago over to Northwest Indiana. And we bought this house that was like
1975 inside, all original, and we were going to rehab the the house. Um, and it
had this unfinished basement. And so we were talking like, you know, this is 2017 at the time and we’re like, you
know, we keep hearing about this Airbnb thing. Um, you know, what if we just try this? What if we turn the the basement
into a separate apartment and rent it out? And so we did that and we put it on Airbnb just before Memorial Day and uh
that whole summer started booking up like crazy. And we made $22,000 on this little dinky one-bedroom apartment with
no windows just over that first summer. And I was like, “Okay, I have long-term
rentals that don’t make 22 grand in a whole year, and I just made it on this tiny little apartment uh short-term
rental.” So, that was when the idea sparked, and we really were like, okay, if we can scale this, there’s something
to this. And then we did a few single family and then we realized, okay, if we buy these small multi-units with
multiple streams of high income coming in as short-term rentals and they’re in
areas that are relatively budget friendly, we can create some really significant cash flow. And so we started
doing that and that just just changed everything for us. Gotcha. Yeah. So what’s interesting and
the timing of when you started this was a bit ahead of what I would consider to be the wave where it got really really
popular. Yeah. Which is great. Right. So you you built again a lot of probably early experience as what it takes to be a good host. How
to, you know, manage listings, how to learn dynamic pricing, a lot of the skills that I’m sure you need to be even
way better at in today’s market to compete. Um now that I guess short-term rental is a more sophisticated strategy.
and um and it seems like there have been these waves of popularity and then there was pullbacks and now it’s a more common
thing. So I think I told you you know before I invest in residential assisted living and I feel like that’s kind of
like at the beginning of a wave right now. Short-term rentals like the wave started cresting in um you know 2018
2019 and especially in COVID that was kind of one of the things that people when people were first coming back out
they were staying at short-term rentals instead of hotels. Um, you know, so it
seems like there’s been a few mini cycles within the bigger cycle of short-term rentals, and you also
mentioned, you know, you’ve you’ve rented extra rooms, you had single families, you had multifamilies. There’s
so many options. And where I’m going with this is like how does somebody how is somebody supposed to especially if
they’re starting today starting at a very different time in that um maturity than than you did. How is somebody
supposed to pick what type of property to even think about considering before they get into this? Yeah, it’s such a
great question. And to your point, like a lot of people will say, “Well, Airbnb is this or Airb or short-term rentals
are that and they clump all of them together.” And just to give some context, there was over a half billion
bookings with a B on Airbnb alone last year. That doesn’t include Verbbo,
doesn’t include direct bookings, doesn’t include all the other sites that are out there. Um, a half billion. So to clump
all of them together and say they’re all acting in a certain way is like saying
Ferraris and minivans um act in the same way like you know it’s like the whole
auto industry like you know there’s there’s niches within this niche of short-term rentals and it is such a
massive niche now it does kind of get put all all in the same category but uh
I think it’s so important to focus on again go back to your specific goals and
and figure out what it is that’s going to get you to that goal the quickest. And I think the mistake that a lot of
people make when they get into short-term rentals is they Google where’s the best place to buy short-term
rental, right? And and what comes up? The most popular places. So, if you Google that now, it’ll show you some of
the top places are, you know, uh, uh, Los Angeles, California, and Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, and like London, you know, England, and and these are Yeah, because there’s thousands of listings
there. But is that the best place for you specifically depending on your goal or it’ll be like top vacation areas like
the Smoky Mountains or Joshua Tree or Destin Beach, Florida? And that’s where everyone then tends to flock because
that’s where everyone else is doing it. And so everyone’s fighting over this like highanging fruit of these high-end
vacation rentals because it’s really expensive there. And meanwhile, there’s a massive amount of people who travel
just for general reasons. Like anywhere where there’s population, there’s going to be people traveling for weddings, for
funerals, for work, for um visiting family, for just any reason you can
think of. like hundreds upon hundreds of reasons people stay in hotels. And so if if you buy in these areas that are
relatively affordable but yet still close to population, so we typically buy just outside of cities, uh what we found
is that if you buy a a nice small multi-unit, you can have multiple streams of income coming in and we also
have a super listing where we list the whole building together. So in the summertime for us when it’s a busy season, big groups want to travel, big
families, friend groups, wedding parties, and they all want to stay together. And so you can charge a premium for this place that sleeps 20
people, but yet you can have four separate units in the slow season when it’s typically, you know, um uh the the
couples or the small families that want to, you know, weekend getaways and that sort of thing. So you got this great versatility as well as super high cash
flow. And I kind of fell into this a little bit based off of fear, you know,
because uh I wasn’t willing to go jump into the million-dollar price point um
places that were the the the mainstream vacation rental areas. And so I was like, well, what if I buy it in a place
like we’re we’re in Michigan City, Indiana, where it’s super affordable and I know worst case scenario, I can always
convert it back to a long-term rental. And I’ve I’ve kept that same strategy. Now, we have 39 short-term rental
listings, and every one of them could be converted back to a long-term rental at some point, and they still cash flow.
So, you know, even if there’s a financial meltdown or regulation change or any of these other things that could
come up, I’m still in a really good situation, I’m not going to lose my properties or anything like that.
Market pick: Buy Here / Skip This
Yeah. Having multiple exit strategies or at least available options to exit um or
hold, right? to your point, it’s not even an exit. It’s a multiple hold strategy that you could convert to long-term rental
and hopefully you would at least be breaking even after expenses if not making a little positive. But I guess so really important points
you’re making. It is. I think if you only examine short-term rentals at the surface level, you are going to kind of
gravitate towards those more popular destinations where you either have to buy an existing one that’s going to be priced at a premium or you have to be
really crafty and resourceful and find a good deal that you can get favorable financing on and set everything up
yourself and do it um and compete with people that already do have existing listings. Both of those sound like paths
of very high resistance and friction unless you have a you know steady hand guiding you. But there are all these
other options available. I had this misconception which I’m happy for you to correct right now that after that COVID
boom where people were all staying like every available Airbnb was pretty much booked because that’s where people were
comfortable staying. But then in 2022, 2023, some of the listings that were
those spare bedrooms, they were these not really competitive. There no real competitive amenities, they were
available, but they were no longer attractive as people started going back to the hotels. A, is that a real trend
or is that just me making that story line up in my head? and and B, you know, is there a um, you know, can you still
compete with those kind of like um, spare room or I guess entry level type
listings in in today’s market? Yeah. Yeah, it’s a great question. Um, I I’ve actually, so I’ve never done spare
spare room like we we’ve never rented out an individual room in our house. We we have done the separate I’ve house
hacked ever since that first basement apartment. Um, it it just worked really well. It was a separate apartment,
totally blocked off, so they had their own space, came and left and and didn’t impact our life whatsoever. And then we
moved to this farm where we have a barn B&B now, and that’s that’s our house hack here. Um, but uh to to answer your
question, I think you’re right um that there was a lot of just kind of garbage
listings that were getting, you know, the these hosts looked like geniuses cuz they just set up anything and it was
booking out. like after CO kind of settled a little bit, like summer of 2020,
all of a sudden just bookings just shot through the roof um because people were just wanting to get out of the cities
and and travel and there just wasn’t nearly enough of them to support the travel. And so everyone um did did great
no matter what. Competition is interesting with with short-term rentals, though. If you like today, now
that you know we kind of have more of a settled market, um if you look at any
market, there’s really like the goal is to be ranked on the first or second page
of Airbnb, right? It’s it’s very similar to Amazon. Like if you’re buy a product, you look at the first or second page and
you look for the highest ranked product and that’s what you buy. And that’s the same as how it works on Airbnb. like you
search for an area, you know, the top ones are going to come up. Airbnb wants
to show you the best ones or their most recommended ones based on a combination of reviews and pricing. And people just
book off the top ones. They’re not going to page 40 to look at your your property. And so, if you think about a
market like, for example, Scottsdale is a very popular short-term rental market. There’s one first page for Scottsdale.
So, if you put in Scottsdale, you want to stay there, there’s one first Airbnb page, and there’s also one first Airbnb
page for uh a place like uh someone in my program just finished a a property in
Sous St. Marie, Michigan, which is in Upper Peninsula, Michigan. Most people have never heard of it. Uh it’s right on
the border, but it’s it’s a great place to own a really affordable short-term rental because there’s a lot of stuff
going on, a lot of infrastructure being built, a lot of travel through there, and there’s one first page there. But
when you compare if just pull it up for for the fun of it and compare the first
page listings in both locations, it is unbelievable the difference. Like the
ones in Sous St. Marie, it’s like just like a random iPhone picture of just, you know, maybe the bed’s made, maybe
it’s not. Uh maybe they’re cats in the picture. Um it’s like just somebody who
decided I’m going to try this thing out and it’s not a business. Um it’s not something they’re taking very serious.
Scottsdale, it’s an arms race of amenities. Like you literally better have the top pool. Not just a pool, but
like the the waterfall, you know? You better have the pickle ball court. You better have like And next week
somebody’s going to one up yours. and and because there’s only so many people who can afford that high-end vacation
and you have to be the top one and so the the top page of the thousands of
listings in that market is extremely competitive, but then you can it’s easy
to dominate these smaller markets. So competition is is really interesting when you start to compare it locally and
with the type of property that you’re you’re renting out. Yeah, I think this is a really important conversation
because again, me not having focused on short-term rentals myself, but being very aware of or at least trying to pay
attention to the trends and also knowing a lot of people that have done this. The prevailing theory that I hear is that
it’s more of that arms race of amenities that you’re mentioning. But to your point, that’s if you try and go compete
in these very saturated markets, which you probably can do. It’s not that anybody wouldn’t be capable of doing it,
but it’s more capital. It’s more money on marketing uh and probably a lot more
stressful to try and because like you said, you could have the nicest listing today and then somebody you know in
October opens a new one that has all the same amenities plus a couple more and all of a sudden you’re struggling to to
keep up with them. So in your program and like with the type of people that
you know you’re usually helping, are you trying to help uncover these areas of opportunity like these smaller markets
where the entry points are more affordable? you give them the systems to compete in a less crowded pool. Is that
like a common strategy or is it really all across the spectrum? No, that’s exactly it. Yeah, a lot of
Competing: first-page strategy
people I work with are either just starting out for the first time or they’re people who own the the the Smoky
Mountains million-dollar cabin or the the Scottsdale, you know, desert oasis
property and they paid a million bucks for it. When I ask them, you know, what’s your what’s your cash flow on it?
Most of them default to, well, my gross income is 100,000 a year. I’m like, “Okay, what’s your cash flow?” You know, nobody
wants to talk about the bottom line on those properties. And they’re like, “Well, you know, I’m making like 500
bucks or a thousand bucks a month.” And, you know, and they justify it because they own this Instagrammable property
and they’re like, “Well, longterm it’s going to appreciate. So, I can justify this.” And meanwhile, in these really
affordable properties, I buy based off, and this is what I recommend to everyone I work with, buy based off the 1% net
rule of thumb. So, if I’m buying a property for $300,000, it needs to
generate $3,000 of net cash flow after all my expenses, mortgage set aside for
maintenance, utilities, lawn care, everything. $3,000 that I’m actually
putting in my pocket that I can pay my grocery bills with, can pay my personal mortgage with. Like, that’s the freedom
number at the end of the day. I don’t care about gross. But if you buy a $300,000 3 unit that’s relatively
turnkey, typically in the Midwest, you see this these price points, that could
bring in two grand a month per unit easily. So, that’s $6,000 of net cash
flow coming in. And then if you subtract out your expenses, you know, $3,000
worth of expenses, you’re left with $3,000 of net cash flow, you know, just as rough numbers. Um, and that’s very
doable. And and and so the ROI on these types of deals are just so much higher.
And so yeah, so that’s what I kind of take people through the the process of identifying for them because it can work
in a lot of areas, but for them based on their competit their uh competitive advantages and their um preferences and
their goals like what’s the perfect market for them and then you know we build economies of scale there.
It’s really fascinating because you know I I run a program where we teach people how to invest out of state and our primary focus is on long-term rentals
and we have similar fundamental ideas. It’s like you there are markets across the country where you can buy properties
at very, you know, great value. Um they’re still affordable. You can still
get decent cash flow and long term over a long time horizon. You can it’s a sustainable strategy that doesn’t
involve you having to put, you know, $200,000 down to buy down, you know, rates on a property
just to barely get it to break even in cash flow because you think, you know, you’re betting on long-term appreciation.
Some people do that and it absolutely can work especially if you can endure whatever ups and downs come in that
market. But it’s a stressful way to live and kind of the the approach that you’re taking is very similar to how I think
about these like kind of um more stable markets. It’s also I I sometimes draw the parallel between uh stock investing,
right? Like some people bet on the the Tesla and the the big growth stocks and
that can work really really well in the long run. But if you’re a 100% indexed on growth stocks, then you’re going to
be riding a roller coaster every day. There’s the idea of this kind of like dividend stock or these more stable
legacy companies, blue chips if you will. And um you know the the Midwest markets and the more stable, less
volatile markets are the ones I kind of think of as like the dividend stocks. You can buy a good value, you can create
good cash flow over a long time horizon. It’s going to work out probably to accomplish every financial goal that you
may ever have. And uh and it’ll probably be a lot less stressful than trying to play, you know, especially if you’re
doing this on the side, like while you’re working full-time or while you have kids, unless you’re going to make it your main main thing to be I’m going
to be the best competitive short-term rental owner in Scottsdale, like you’re competing against people who probably do
have more time and resources. So, that’s where that kind of goal setting and lifestyle stuff we were talking about
earlier, like what’s the end outcome you’re trying to enable? Is it to spend more have more time freedom and um you
know enjoy your life or is it to be super competitive and work 60 hours a week to to stay afloat? So I really like
the approach that that you’re taking and how you kind of um instead of trying to go straight, you know, upstream to the
the cream of the crop, which I’m sure you can help people with, too. You’re also providing this alternative
perspective that there are other markets where you don’t have to do that and um and you can still find success. Yeah.
So, yeah. Absolutely. Absolutely. So, what is the barn BNB and um and how
Barn B&B house-hack
does a single 800 foot um listing potentially pay for I believe you said
your entire living expenses on a 45 acre property, but yeah, fill us in a bit. Yeah. Well, uh the entire mortgage and
that was as of before we just refinanced. So, I just pulled out a ton of um cash uh out of our property
because it’s appreciated so much since we bought it just in 2020. Um so, the mortgage is a little bit higher now. Um
we used a VA loan, which is a great terms and everything. Um so, it doesn’t the BMBB doesn’t quite cover the entire
mortgage anymore, but um but it’s pretty close. Uh and so we bought this pro. So,
our our you know, we wanted to we initially moved over to northwest Indiana and moved right on Lake Michigan
and had no yard and then we started having kids and realized this wasn’t the smartest uh setup for for a growing
family. Um right on the lake. Uh and so we we knew we wanted to move out more to
the country. We wanted to grow some of our own food, have animals. Um and so we moved about 20 minutes away from from
there to buy this farm. And it’s a 45acre farm. Um, and my parents actually ended up moving in next door to us, too.
Uh, they moved out from Illinois. And, uh, it’s been a amazing setup, but it ca
it was it hadn’t been lived in for 15 years when we bought it. So, it was totally overgrown, totally outdated, but
it had these big outuildings on it. So, it had a couple garages and then this huge 40 uh 55x 65 ft pole barn. It was
built in the ’90s, and they were using it for animals. So, it was, you know, all unfinished and in rough shape. But
we we rehabbed the whole thing. And so that’s where I’m sitting right now. My my office/ studio is part of it. Um but
we had it’s so big that you could use it for so many different reasons. And so I
can work out of here um and run my business out of here. And uh we’ve got a a big gym um that our our guests can use
as well that we created so we could cancel our gym membership, you know, and and so my dad and I both use it
regularly. And then uh we built a barnbnb in the corner. So it’s a Airbnb that’s in this barn. It has a loft
upstairs. So it sleeps six people. Um and uh it just stays out stays booked
out like crazy. Uh we we have almost 200 all five star reviews. At this point we
have 190 reviews and every single one of them is five stars. And these are people who are literally sleeping in a barn.
You have to go. And so when we did it we’re like is this going to work? We didn’t really know again like you don’t
know all the um steps but but we looked at others and and we realized that sometimes these unique setups actually
perform the best and and people we actually thought it was going to be all city people wanting to come out to the
experience a farm. Ironically it’s a lot of farmers and a lot of people in the country that are like I have no desire
to be in the city when I travel so I want to be on a farm uh because they like that lifestyle. And so, um, you
know, we have our chicken coupe right outside the door of 50 chickens and there’s there’s roosters in the morning and stuff and so we’re clear with our
guests like this is a farm. Like, you know, you’re going to hear farm noises and, um, and so, uh, it’s just done
really well. And so, it stays year round. It stays pretty booked out. I mean, we probably have like 80%
occupancy rate. And, uh, in the summertime, we can charge quite a bit. Um, and it it’s paid for our whole
property. So, this is just like a kind of a creative house hack. And we’re we
feel like we would never not be in a house hack situation. Whether it’s renting out a barn, a basement, a
finished garage, it just when you eliminate your cost of living, whether
it’s rent or your mortgage, it’s not like a one-time, you know, I I eliminated my mortgage payment. It’s
like forever. Like the the what that does to your personal finances. I can’t like this is like one of the absolute
most impactful thing anyone can do to their personal finances is figure out a
a um house hack situation. Whatever that is for you, whether it’s renting a room in your house, buying a duplex, whatever
it is, where you can offset your cost of housing, it just changes your financial
picture in a perpetuity. Yeah. No, that’s amazing. And and I think too and this might just be a
limiting belief of of my own uh because obviously there are solutions but we had three kids in the last you know three
years and um it really changed I knowing what I know
now I wish I did a lot more house hacking before we did that but what you’re kind of sharing is that you know
even with you have four kids and um even with the fourth one will be here in a month so
okay yes soon to be four but you know uh definitely a consideration right and you
can’t just pick up and move into a new quadplex, you know, one-bedroom apartment every year
house hacking and building that snowball, but there are different creative ways to do it like what you’re what you’re sharing.
Um, that still are accessible for families. And so again, kind of my takeaway from a lot of your story, well,
a lot of takeaways, but one of them being that there are creative ways to still not only, you know, succeed in
short-term rentals in less competitive markets, but that there’s also creative ways to address your own personal financial situation that um and you’ve
done a really good job, it seems like, in responding to those signals as they present themselves over time. You started with flipping, you know, um you
learned a lot from that. You got your experience, but you also learned that that’s not what you wanted to do forever. you changed your frame, you
evolved, you got into rentals, and then you discovered this path of short-term rentals, and now it’s evolved into what
it is today. I mean, that’s a that’s a great example of um you know, an iterative uh real estate journey. And um
Leaving W-2: 8-unit plan
one topic I just want to make sure we hit on before the end, though, because you mentioned that the second time you left to go full-time into real estate
was more successful than the first. I just want to give you a second to kind of frame that and um and share what your
kind of takeaways were and and especially related to if people are considering leaving their job like what
is that kind of right time based on your experience? Yeah. Yeah. So I like you mentioned I’ve
had the um opportunity to leave my job twice uh for real estate and the first
time obviously wasn’t successful since I did it twice. Um I had to go back and get a job. So, the first time was
leaving the army. Um, and and like we kind of talked about, I didn’t have a super clear plan of what that was going
to look like. Um, I just knew I wanted to get into real estate and I kind of envisioned that I would figure it out as I went. And it was a painful way to do
it. Um, living on nothing. Like I said, my my parents were gracious enough to let me live in their basement for a year
while I got started and just was able to scrape together a little bit um to live off of, but um not the recommended way
to do it. And so then after I was done flipping and decided I’m going to build up a portfolio, I had to go back and get
a corporate job. So I got a job downtown Chicago, uh I was a CFO of this nonprofit that I was passionate about,
but um so I enjoyed the job, but I had to, you know, work to to feed myself and
my family at that point. Um with the goal then as as I mentioned, like we started talking about what our goal was
and we knew we wanted to get to a place where we could live off the the the real estate. And so while I was at my job,
then I started building up cash flow and started building up um rental properties and and so I once we discovered this the
strategy of these affordable short-term rentals that cash flow high, we realized if I could get to eight of these that
would would replace my W2 income or or at least be right around the W2 income.
And so that’s what we did. And so that was about four four and a half years ago at this point when I we got to that
place and I I was able to leave the job. And so the peacefulness of that
situation compared to just I’m going to leave and figure it out uh is I mean it
was night and day different. And at that point we you know it still wasn’t quite
enough to where I would feel comfortable if I just stayed with those eight properties. Like I’d be you know really
comfortable. But what I didn’t realize is how much capacity it would free up once I went back to just, you know, um,
working on the real estate. You know, all of a sudden 48 plus hours a week is freed up. And we went from from eight at
that point. Now we have 39 short-term rental listings four and a half years later because we I just had so much more
capacity and I could focus on things that aligned with our goals and and live a more umh
aligned life, I guess. And so I guess I would say like my advice would be don’t
just jump into it, but at the same time don’t take too long either. I’ve seen people on the other end of the spectrum
and they’re like, “Well, I got to get to like this insane number to leave my job.” And I’m like, “Well, what’s the
worst?” Like you can always go back to your job and like you’re going to free up all this time and that’s the worst
income you can make from a tax perspective, too. So, like if you’re making $100,000 a year in your W2 job,
you’re actually keeping like 70,000. So, all you need to make is 70,000 to replace that. You might not even need to
replace it cuz you’re not commuting downtown and eating out and doing all this stuff that that costs a bunch of money. Um, so like when you really look
at it, you can probably do it quicker than you think, but I would encourage people build up some streams of income
first before you pull that trigger and then um, you know, prove it prove it as a as a model first.
Yeah, that’s that’s really good advice because I think sometimes people are waiting for the perfect moment and the
perfect moment might never present itself. Yeah. But but there’s also an opportunity cost and and value of your time. So for you
the number was eight, right? You you did some math to say this is this will get me to a comfortable enough spot that we
can make that cut over. But then like you said when you unlock that time that allowed you to accelerate and do
different things and and kind of use your time in a more valuable way. Yes. And that’s something where I feel like
people often underestimate the value of their time, right? Even if you have a
six-f figureure salary, there are potentially activities you could be doing or things you could be spending
your time on that are have higher dollar productive value. And um people maybe
have I think by default a general assumption that their their time is only worth X amount. But when you’re building
all these skills on the side, you’re learning all these strategies, different ways to accelerate not only your wealth building, but build cash flow,
then you have to start thinking about um you know, if I spend those 40 hours on on my job making $120,000 a year, uh is
that as as much as I could make and as much benefit for and value to my family and and you know, my own um increasing
my own value as it would be if I spent that um time separately on on building
my own thing. So, I really like that framing and I think that’s those are great takeaways. Yeah. Yeah. And just one follow up on
that too, like you you might have to take a little bit of a step back to step forward, but like at this point, I look
back at what I was thinking was like incredible salary, you know, in a W2 job, like if I would just have gotten a
raise to like a certain amount, like that was like a great great income. and and now like I make way more than that
doing something that I really enjoy and like have so much more flexibility and autonomy. And I didn’t realize that was
a reality or that it was possible, but I was willing to kind of take a step back a little bit in terms of income
initially to then be able to build up these streams of income that just accumulate over time.
Yeah. Yeah. It’s really good. Well, Kirby, I u I enjoy getting to know your story. Uh there’s a lot to unpack there
Takeaways & next steps
and but I honestly think that the people that have evolved over time and done
different things, gotten different types of experience are among the best people to learn from. Um so it’s great to hear
that you, you know, also are giving back and and teaching other people how to get started. But if people want to get in
touch with you or follow you on on your podcast, your coaching program, uh where where can they find you?
Yeah. Um, I’d say the best place is probably just go to uh um livingoff rentals.com/start.
Um, that’s that that I I’ve got a um web class that I just recently recorded and
delivered there um that you can watch that’s about an hour long that walks you through my entire strategy step by step
of how I think about things, example deals that we’re doing and other people I work with are doing. And so, um,
that’s probably the best place to really learn the most. And then there’s a link there. You can always book a call with me too if you if you want.
Awesome. We’ll make sure that’s all included in the show notes and uh hopefully we’ll do this again sometime soon, but uh thank you again for coming
on the show. Thanks for having me. Thank you for making it to the end of today’s episode. As you may know,
podcasts are very difficult to grow organically. If you’re getting value from today’s episode, I’d deeply
appreciate if you can take 30 seconds to leave my show a fivestar rating and review. This will go a long way to
helping me reach more listeners just like you. Thank you so much in advance.
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