Or if they throw a law back on that you can’t evict a non payer and you have to eat 7-12 months of rent.I would say as long as you are reasonably liquid, so you can comfortably cover your mortgages with reduced income for several months, you should be fine. Anyone not in that position…I would recommend they sell properties until they got there. I recall hearing a lady (I believe from Minnesota) who owned property in Anna Maria, FL freaking out in the first months of Covid because she couldn’t have vacation renters, and it was going to bankrupt her. That person is/was over-leveraged.
And I wouldn’t say this is like 2008, where the average home buyer was getting bad loans that put them in danger of foreclosure. It’s the investors I’m more concerned about. You almost feel like you hear it everywhere you go - real estate is easy money. It’s the easy path to wealth. You’ve got podcasts teaching people how to string themselves out, buying property after property with minimal down payments. It’s all a numbers game. As long as they can rent the homes out X% of the time, they’re golden. I strongly feel it’s about to hit the fan for those people.


