Build Real Estate Wealth with Clear Education
Plain-English education for new and growing real estate investors. Rentals, flips, creative deals — the foundational knowledge before you put money in.
Educational only · No-pressure guidance · Texas, Colorado, and national education.
01Start here
Pick the situation that matches you. Each path leads to the right starting guides.
I want to buy my first rental
From property selection to first tenant — the complete first-rental walkthrough.
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I want to learn about flipping
Real numbers on flips, what kills profit, and when to walk away.
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I'm interested in creative deals
Seller financing, subject-to, wholesaling — how creative finance actually works.
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I want to analyze deals correctly
Cash flow, cap rate, ROI — the metrics that matter and the ones that don’t.
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I'm scaling my profile
From 1 property to 10 — financing, systems, and managing growth.
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I want to invest passively
Real estate syndications, REITs, and turnkey rentals for hands-off investors.
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02Featured buying guides
The most-recommended starting points for investors.
Creative Finance for Investors
Seller financing, subject-to, lease options — when each works for investors.
Rental Property Analysis
Cash flow, cap rate, cash-on-cash — the math behind smart purchases.
Fix and Flip Guide
Real numbers on flipping — costs, risks, timelines, and pitfalls.
BRRRR Method Guide
Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat — the strategy and the realistic risks.
Out-of-State Investing
Investing in distant markets without losing your shirt.
03Popular topics
Quick tags to browse buying content.
04Free tools
Calculators built for real-world buying decisions.
05Free downloads
Two starter guides for buyers.
Plain-English intro to seller financing, subject-to, lease options.
A spreadsheet template for running the numbers on potential rentals.
06Beginner-friendly FAQ
The most common questions from new investors.
How much money do I need to start investing in real estate?
Less than people think, but more than zero. Conventional investment loans require 20-25% down plus closing costs and reserves — on a $200K rental, that’s roughly $50,000-$60,000 cash. House hacking (buying a duplex/4-plex with FHA, 3.5% down, living in one unit) cuts that dramatically. Creative finance (seller financing, subject-to) can sometimes require very little cash but trades cash for complexity. Don’t believe “no money down” gurus — every deal needs some skin in the game somewhere.
Should I buy local or invest out of state?
Local is easier (you know the market, can self-manage, can do repairs yourself). Out-of-state can be more profitable if your local market has weak rent-to-price ratios. Most successful long-distance investors hire a local property manager (8-12% of rent) and a reliable inspector. The biggest risk with out-of-state investing is buying in a market you don’t actually understand — economy, tenant quality, regulations, and neighborhood dynamics matter more than any spreadsheet.
What's a good cap rate?
Depends entirely on the market. Class A urban properties: 4-6%. Class B suburban: 6-8%. Class C lower-income or rural: 8-12%+. Higher cap rates mean higher returns but typically also higher risk (tenant issues, repairs, market volatility). Cap rate alone doesn’t tell you much — compare it to local averages, factor in your cash-on-cash return, and consider the total return including appreciation potential and tax benefits.
Is the BRRRR method actually realistic?
Yes, but harder than gurus make it sound. BRRRR (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) works when you can buy under market value, add value through renovations, and refinance at the new appraised value to pull out most of your initial investment. Risks: appraisal coming in low, rehab costs exceeding budget, longer-than-expected timelines, and rates changing. Successful BRRRR investors have local contractor relationships, understand their market deeply, and have cash reserves to survive surprises.
Should I self-manage or hire a property manger?
Self-managing 1-3 local properties: doable if you can handle tenant calls, screening, repairs, and legal compliance. Hiring a property manager (8-12% of rent + setup fees): worth it for distance properties, multiple units, or if your time is better spent finding deals. Bad property managers can destroy your investment — vet them carefully: ask how many units they manage per staffer, what their turnover rate is, how they handle delinquencies, and how they choose tenants.
What are the tax benefits of rental properties?
Significant. You can deduct: mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, repairs, property management fees, depreciation (a non-cash deduction that often makes your rental show a tax loss while making real cash flow), travel to your properties, and home office expenses. Real estate professionals (specific IRS designation) can use rental losses to offset other income. The depreciation recapture and capital gains taxes when you sell are real but can be deferred with 1031 exchanges. Always work with a CPA familiar with real estate.
This page is educational only. Buying decisions, loan options, market conditions, costs, and eligibility vary by location and individual situation. Speak with qualified professionals before making decisions.
Have Questions About Real Estate Investing?
Send us your situation, or book a call with someone on our team. No pressure, no guru pitches — just educational guidance for your specific decisions.