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Just caught Dave Ramsey going off again about real estate, and honestly his takes on this always make me think differently about "passive" income. The guy's basically saying if you think rental properties are passive, you're deluding yourself.
He keeps hammering this point: fixing burst pipes, chasing down rent, replacing HVAC systems — that's not passive work, that's literally a job. And he's got a point. I've heard too many stories of people getting into real estate expecting to just collect checks while sitting on the beach, then getting blindsided by maintenance costs or tenant issues.
What's interesting is how he compares it to actual passive investments. Mutual funds? You get a statement, done. S&P 500 index fund? Set it and forget it. But real estate? Even if you hire a management company, you're still managing the managers. Ramsey shared this wild example where his property manager called about a $26,000 repair. Didn't feel passive at all, he said.
The thing that hit me most was his reality check on the "renters will make you rich" fantasy. He basically called out these get-rich-quick websites for selling people a dream where renters subsidize everything. Nope, you're paying for it first, and maybe renters help chip in. Building a portfolio on heavy debt while expecting tenants to make you rich? He said it's "laughable."
Now here's where it gets interesting with REITs. Ramsey's actually recommending them as an alternative for people who don't want to deal with the day-to-day grind of property management. But there are conditions: you need to be completely debt-free (including your home), max out your retirement accounts first, and keep REIT investments under 10% of your net worth. He also emphasizes picking funds with solid track records run by experienced investors.
So if you're thinking about real estate investing, his advice is pretty clear: go in with your eyes open about the work involved. Build your emergency fund, lock down your retirement, pay off your own place first. And if you want actual passive income without the landlord headaches? That's where REITs come in, but only as part of a bigger, more strategic wealth-building plan.
Makes you rethink what "passive" actually means, doesn't it?