I Bought Real Estate to "Build Wealth" but I'm Actually Just Broke With a Mortgage
Dear Maxine,
I feel like an idiot writing this. I'm 34, make $68k salary, and two years ago I bought a rental property for $285k to "build wealth" because everyone says real estate is the path to riches. I put down 15%, financed the rest, and it rents for $1,400/month. My mortgage is $1,650, plus property tax, insurance, maintenance reserves, and vacancy buffer. I'm bleeding about $300/month. I thought the property would appreciate and I'd eventually break even, but honestly I'm exhausted. I have $12k in savings and I'm stressed constantly. My friends talk about their real estate portfolios and I just smile and nod. What am I missing?
—Landlord in Over My Head
You're not missing anything. You're living something: the gap between the fantasy of real estate wealth and the reality of being an overleveraged landlord on a $68k salary.
Here's the thing nobody says out loud—real estate isn't an investment that builds wealth for you. It's an investment that builds wealth *if the numbers work*. And your numbers don't work. Not yet, anyway.
The math is simple: You're negative $3,600 per year. That's a $3,600 annual tax on your ambition. Over five years, that's $18,000 out of pocket, assuming nothing breaks. (It will break.) Meanwhile, you're sitting on $12k in liquid savings, which is basically one bad repair away from credit card debt.
This is what happens when people buy real estate as a *wealth-building strategy* instead of a *cash-flow business*. You can't build wealth on borrowed money if the borrowed money isn't earning you anything.
The brutal truth: You made a mistake. Not a catastrophic one—markets can bail you out, and property does appreciate over decades—but a mistake nonetheless. You bought at the wrong price point for your income level, and you're now experiencing what landlords call "negative cash flow," which is a fancy way of saying "I'm paying for this privilege."
Here's what you do now:
**Stop waiting for appreciation.** Appreciation might happen. It might not. You can't eat it.
**Sell the property.** Run the numbers: How much will selling cost (realtor commission, closing costs)? What's your current equity? If you can break even or pocket $10-15k after expenses, take it. Yes, you'll feel like you failed. You didn't. You learned something that costs most people $18,000 and keeps them stuck for 10 years.
If selling creates a $5-10k loss, weigh that against five more years of bleeding $300/month. Do the math yourself—don't let FOMO do it for you.
**If you absolutely won't sell**, then treat this like a job: Can you raise rent? Can you cut expenses? Can you refinance? You need to either make this cash-flow positive or make a decision to exit.
Real estate wealth is real. But it's built by people who buy properties where rent *exceeds* all expenses. Not by people who are one job loss away from disaster.
One actionable step: Get an appraisal of the property this week and calculate your actual equity. Then get a realtor's pricing opinion. You need real numbers, not hopes.
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