Britton Eads built a portfolio of over 15 rental units while earning just $15 per hour as a fence installer, replacing his entire monthly income with rental cash flow.
A fence installer earning $15/hour bought 15+ rental units in four years — starting with a $70,000 duplex he purchased without ever seeing it or getting an inspection.
BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast
A fence installer earning $15/hour bought 15+ rental units in four years — starting with a $70,000 duplex he purchased without ever seeing it or getting an inspection.
TL;DR
Britton Eads went from earning $15/hour as a fence installer to owning 15+ rental units in just four years, all without a college degree or significant savings [1] — Henry Washington "15+ units on $15/hour wage: Britton Eads built a portfolio of over 15 rental units while earning just $15 per hour as a fence installer, re…" . Inspired by Rich Dad Poor Dad, he bought a $70,000 duplex sight unseen — a mistake-laden start that taught him hard lessons about inspections and due diligence [2] — Britton Eads "Britton Eads bought his first rental property sight unseen, with no inspection, not knowing it was over 100 years old. The property happene…" 03:15 . He then leveraged FHA loans, private money, cross-collateralization, and a $212,000 cash-out refinance to scale his portfolio [3] — Britton Eads "With $1,500 in his bank account and a $265K deal under contract, Britton posted in an investor community offering 10% interest-only for one…" 25:55 . The single most important takeaway: always buy properties that cash flow on day one so the asset protects itself when things go wrong [4] — Britton Eads "The most important thing is cash flow, is making sure these properties cash flow. The main thing was buying properties with as little money…" 36:30 .
Britton Eads went from $15/hour fence installer to 15+ rental units in four years, using FHA loans, private money, cross-collateralization, and a $212K cash-out refinance. He made classic beginner mistakes — buying sight unseen, skipping inspections — but his commitment to cash-flowing deals kept him from losing it all.
Henry Washington opens with a rapid-fire summary of Britton Eads's investor story — a tale featuring college dropout, electrician union quitter, and fence installer who somehow ended up with over 15 rental units and $200,000 in equity. Washington names the classic beginner errors upfront: buying without seeing the property, skipping the inspection, pipes bursting two weeks in. He's deliberately candid about what not to do, precisely because what Britton did right — relentless deal-hunting and never quitting — is the real lesson. The teaser closes with a clear promise to the audience: if you think you're stuck, Britton's story is proof that the excuses don't hold.
Britton Eads walks Henry Washington through a straightforward but relatable backstory: high school class of 2021, six months of college, out. Six months in the electrician union — his father's suggestion — complicated by night school an hour from home, out. It was during his time at the union that his girlfriend's grandmother handed him Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad, a move that would redirect his entire trajectory. The moment he finished reading it, Britton says, he wondered aloud whether financial freedom through real estate could really be as straightforward as the book suggested. He quit the union training, went back to work for his dad's fencing business, and started listening to podcasts and hunting for properties.
This chapter is equal parts horror story and beginner miracle. Britton negotiated the asking price down from $80,000 to $70,000 with a single counter-offer, the seller so eager to exit that he simply agreed. What Britton didn't know — because he never went to look — was that the building was over a century old. Henry Washington's incredulous reaction ('That thing was over 100 years old well before you made an offer') lands as one of the episode's funniest lines, but it carries a serious undercurrent. The saving grace was that existing tenants were paying about $1,000/month, so the property was at least livable and income-producing. Washington credits that fact with protecting Britton from a far worse outcome. [1] — Britton Eads "I bought this duplex, I had never seen it. I didn't do an inspection. I didn't even know how old it was. I didn't know anything about it." 03:15
Six months after closing, Britton convinced his bank to roll $30,000 in construction funding into the duplex deal, inspired by Kiyosaki and McElroy's BiggerPockets episodes about forced appreciation. The renovation was thorough: new roof, mini splits for heating and cooling, LVP floors throughout, and a full bathroom overhaul that replaced a decorative clawfoot tub with a practical shower combo. Rents rose to $1,800/month — a solid result — but the appraisal returned at exactly $100,000, the same figure as his total investment, yielding zero refinanceable equity. His monthly expenses (mortgage $697, insurance $100, taxes $100, reserves $300) still left him $500–$600 positive each month, so the deal wasn't a loss. But the appraisal ceiling was a painful introduction to the limits of value-add investing in lower-cost rural markets.
The first ad break covers four sponsors targeting real estate investors and small business operators. Steadily pitches landlord insurance built for short-term rentals and promises BiggerPockets Pro members a 5% discount. NREG positions itself as the insurer that takes time to properly evaluate each property's risk profile rather than issuing instant quotes. The Fundrise Flagship Fund touts five-plus years of operation and over $1 billion in assets under management, with a minimum investment of just $10. Indeed Sponsored Jobs closes with the claim that companies made 27 hires on the platform in the span of the one-minute read, offering listeners a $75 job-credit at indeed.com/podcast.
After his duplex experience, Britton found himself motivated but stalled — he wanted to buy again but lacked both money and direction. His solution was organic networking: he asked his mother, a bank vice president, whether she knew anyone who owned a lot of apartments. She connected him to Hank Ballinger, a local landlord with over 800 units, who ran a one-on-one mentorship for $500 over six weeks. Hank's curriculum covered deal analysis, the 1% rule, distinguishing cheap properties from good properties (the duplex was cheap, not good), and the non-negotiable basics Britton had skipped on deal one — inspections, property walkthroughs. Henry Washington uses this moment to coach listeners: you probably have someone in your network who can make this kind of introduction; the goal is to keep asking until you find them. [1] — Britton Eads "$500 mentor class, 6 weeks, 800-door landlord: Britton paid $500 for a six-week one-on-one mentorship with Hank Ballinger, a landlord with …" 18:00
With Hank Ballinger's framework in mind, Britton began hunting for fourplexes in Richmond, Kentucky, where most sell between $350,000 and $400,000. He spotted this one on Zillow — priced at $245,000 and sitting unsold for six months — because the previous owner had left two units in terrible shape, including a hole cut in the ceiling to investigate a toilet leak that was never repaired. That cosmetic disaster repelled other buyers but not Britton, who saw the underlying structure: new roof, new HVACs, and rent potential his mentor confirmed was strong. An FHA loan put him in the door for about $7,000 out of pocket (3.5% down), requiring him to live in one unit for a year. After LVP flooring, wall removal, and fresh fixtures, three units went to Section 8 at $900 each and the one-bedroom rented for $850. Total rents: $3,450/month. A second appraiser later valued the property at $322,000, confirming real equity [1] — Britton Eads "FHA fourplex with 3.5% down (~$7,000): Britton purchased a $245,000 fourplex using an FHA loan, requiring only about $7,000 out of pocket w…" 08:32 .
While touring a Zillow listing for a triplex priced at $185,000, Britton Eads did something most buyers don't: he looked next door. An identical building with 7 mailboxes on the porch told him there were more units there than on the listing. A quick call to the realtor confirmed the same owner held both properties and was open to selling together. The second triplex, with two units gutted to the studs, was priced at $80,000. For a combined $265,000, Britton was under contract for 7 income units already generating $3,200/month. Henry Washington connects this moment to a broader truth: deals exist on public platforms, but it takes a trained eye and the habit of always looking beyond the obvious to find them [1] — Britton Eads "While touring a triplex, Britton noticed the identical building next door had 7 mailboxes. One quick call confirmed the neighbor owned it t…" 21:10 . Post-renovation, the portfolio hit $6,000/month in rents and appraised at $545,000 — $240,000 above all-in costs.
The financing story for the seven-unit portfolio is where Britton's creativity shines brightest. With effectively no cash available, he joined an investor community, posted the deal's projected ARV ($450K) and projected rents ($6,000/month), and offered a private lender 10% interest-only for one year plus a balloon repayment at refinance. Within two weeks a stranger wired him $46,025. He carried that check to his community bank, which issued a 5-year term / 20-year amortization commercial loan for the balance and stacked a $40,000 construction line on top. The bank's comfort came from the existing $3,200/month in rents — proof the asset performed on day one. Henry Washington uses this moment to explain the essence of community banking: flexible, relationship-driven underwriting that larger institutions won't offer [1] — Britton Eads "With $1,500 in his bank account and a $265K deal under contract, Britton posted in an investor community offering 10% interest-only for one…" 25:55 .
Britton found yet another Zillow deal: a $250,000 two-sided duplex in a market where similar properties sell for $320,000–$340,000, being rented for a combined $1,400/month. He made an offer at asking price the same day two other buyers toured it, moving decisively because the value gap was obvious. The problem: he had $3,000 in his bank. His solution was cross-collateralization — asking his community bank to pull equity from the triplex portfolio and attach it as collateral on the new duplex loan, adding $50,000 in debt to the combined loan rather than requiring a fresh cash down payment. Henry Washington explains this as a portfolio loan and a core bank-relationship strategy. The DSCR lender on this deal had a 6-month seasoning rule that blocked a construction loan, so Britton negotiated $5,000 in seller credits that the bank returned to him in cash at closing — funding the $8,000 cosmetic renovation [1] — Britton Eads "Britton had $3,000 in the bank when he found a $250,000 duplex. Instead of waiting, he pulled equity from his triplex portfolio and cross-c…" 29:22 . Rents doubled.
The second sponsor set addresses more seasoned investor pain points: Stessa's AI-driven accounting platform that maps landlord income and expenses to Schedule E categories all year; Flock Homes' 721 exchange solution for landlords wanting to exit day-to-day management without triggering a capital gains event; Host Financial's DSCR lending at 80–85% LTV qualifying on property income; and Lennar Investor Marketplace's new-construction rental property browser with real-time return estimates.
In the episode's most instructive chapter, Britton and Henry move from deal recaps to principles. Britton says his primary filter for every acquisition has always been: does this cash flow? He combined all his properties into a jumbo portfolio loan and executed a single cash-out refinance netting $212,000 in one day while still collecting approximately $2,000/month in net income [1] — Britton Eads "Right after Britton pulled $212K in equity, $15,000 in emergency repairs hit in a single month — $5,000 in plumbing and two failed HVAC com…" 37:50 . Almost immediately, $15,000 in emergency repairs arrived in one month — $5,000 in plumbing, two HVAC compressor failures. He says that without those refinanced reserves, he would have lost everything. Henry Washington frames this as the central thesis of the episode: buying with little to no money is possible, but owning real estate without cash reserves is nearly impossible, because repairs don't wait for your bank account to catch up.
The episode's closing chapter is a satisfying before-and-after. Britton, once making $15/hour — his best month as a fence installer topped out around $3,000 — now earns roughly the same amount from passive rental income, but with $100,000 in liquid reserves and two ground-up duplex builds nearly complete that will add $1,200/month. Henry Washington wraps with a distilled investor framework: always be in deal-search mode whether or not you're ready to close; insist on day-one cash flow as your risk management layer; and always look for the opportunity to add value beyond what the current owner sees. Washington thanks Britton for his uncommon transparency — not just about the wins, but about the genuine mistakes that make the story instructive rather than just inspirational.
The episode wraps with Dave Meyer's pre-recorded outro identifying himself as host and executive producer of the BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast, with production credits to Ian Kay, Calico Content for copywriting, and Exodus Media for editing. A standard legal disclaimer follows, noting that all opinions are personal, real estate investing carries risk, and listeners should consult qualified advisors. A post-roll ad for The UPS Store offering three months of free mailbox service with a new annual agreement closes the audio.
Chapter 1 · 00:00
Henry Washington opens with a rapid-fire summary of Britton Eads's investor story — a tale featuring college dropout, electrician union quitter, and fence installer who somehow ended up with over 15 rental units and $200,000 in equity. Washington names the classic beginner errors upfront: buying without seeing the property, skipping the inspection, pipes bursting two weeks in. He's deliberately candid about what not to do, precisely because what Britton did right — relentless deal-hunting and never quitting — is the real lesson. The teaser closes with a clear promise to the audience: if you think you're stuck, Britton's story is proof that the excuses don't hold.
Britton Eads built a portfolio of over 15 rental units while earning just $15 per hour as a fence installer, replacing his entire monthly income with rental cash flow.
Britton's real estate portfolio has accumulated over $200,000 in equity, built through value-add renovations and strategic refinancing over roughly four years.
Chapter 2 · 01:37
Britton Eads walks Henry Washington through a straightforward but relatable backstory: high school class of 2021, six months of college, out. Six months in the electrician union — his father's suggestion — complicated by night school an hour from home, out. It was during his time at the union that his girlfriend's grandmother handed him Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad, a move that would redirect his entire trajectory. The moment he finished reading it, Britton says, he wondered aloud whether financial freedom through real estate could really be as straightforward as the book suggested. He quit the union training, went back to work for his dad's fencing business, and started listening to podcasts and hunting for properties.
Claims made here
Britton Eads bought his first duplex for $70,000 without ever visiting the property or getting an inspection, and it turned out to be over 100 years old.
Britton Eads bought his first rental property sight unseen, with no inspection, not knowing it was over 100 years old. The property happened to be rented and cash flowed — luck, not skill — but the lesson is clear: always visit the property and get an inspection.
Britton bought his first duplex for $70,000 in December 2022 without ever visiting the property, getting an inspection, or knowing its age — it turned out to be over 100 years old.
Chapter 3 · 04:30
This chapter is equal parts horror story and beginner miracle. Britton negotiated the asking price down from $80,000 to $70,000 with a single counter-offer, the seller so eager to exit that he simply agreed. What Britton didn't know — because he never went to look — was that the building was over a century old. Henry Washington's incredulous reaction ('That thing was over 100 years old well before you made an offer') lands as one of the episode's funniest lines, but it carries a serious undercurrent. The saving grace was that existing tenants were paying about $1,000/month, so the property was at least livable and income-producing. Washington credits that fact with protecting Britton from a far worse outcome. [1] — Britton Eads "I bought this duplex, I had never seen it. I didn't do an inspection. I didn't even know how old it was. I didn't know anything about it." 03:15
Claims made here
After renovating the duplex for $30,000, Britton raised rents from $1,000/month to $1,800/month but the property still only appraised for $100,000 despite a $100,000 all-in cost.
Britton purchased a $245,000 fourplex using an FHA loan with just 3.5% down, requiring approximately $7,000 out of pocket.
After renovating and re-renting the duplex for $1,800/month, Britton's payment, insurance, and reserves totaled roughly $1,200, leaving $500–$600 monthly cash flow.
Most investors ignore FHA loans for multi-family properties, but Britton used one to buy a $245,000 fourplex with just 3.5% down — about $7,000. The property now generates $3,450/month with three Section 8 tenants and a fourth unit, all for under $255,000 all-in.
Britton purchased a $245,000 fourplex using an FHA loan, requiring only about $7,000 out of pocket with 3.5% down, while generating $3,450/month in rents.
Chapter 4 · 09:00
Six months after closing, Britton convinced his bank to roll $30,000 in construction funding into the duplex deal, inspired by Kiyosaki and McElroy's BiggerPockets episodes about forced appreciation. The renovation was thorough: new roof, mini splits for heating and cooling, LVP floors throughout, and a full bathroom overhaul that replaced a decorative clawfoot tub with a practical shower combo. Rents rose to $1,800/month — a solid result — but the appraisal returned at exactly $100,000, the same figure as his total investment, yielding zero refinanceable equity. His monthly expenses (mortgage $697, insurance $100, taxes $100, reserves $300) still left him $500–$600 positive each month, so the deal wasn't a loss. But the appraisal ceiling was a painful introduction to the limits of value-add investing in lower-cost rural markets.
Claims made here
The fourplex generates $3,450/month in total rent, with three 2-bedroom units at $900 each and one 1-bedroom at $850, all on Section 8.
An appraiser initially valued the fourplex at $260,000–$270,000, but a second appraiser revalued it at approximately $322,000.
Three two-bedroom units rent at $900 each and one one-bedroom rents at $850, all on Section 8, producing $3,450/month on a $245,000 fourplex.
Chapter 6 · 17:14
After his duplex experience, Britton found himself motivated but stalled — he wanted to buy again but lacked both money and direction. His solution was organic networking: he asked his mother, a bank vice president, whether she knew anyone who owned a lot of apartments. She connected him to Hank Ballinger, a local landlord with over 800 units, who ran a one-on-one mentorship for $500 over six weeks. Hank's curriculum covered deal analysis, the 1% rule, distinguishing cheap properties from good properties (the duplex was cheap, not good), and the non-negotiable basics Britton had skipped on deal one — inspections, property walkthroughs. Henry Washington uses this moment to coach listeners: you probably have someone in your network who can make this kind of introduction; the goal is to keep asking until you find them. [1] — Britton Eads "$500 mentor class, 6 weeks, 800-door landlord: Britton paid $500 for a six-week one-on-one mentorship with Hank Ballinger, a landlord with …" 18:00
Claims made here
Britton purchased two triplexes and a cottage for a combined $265,000 in May 2025, with current rents of $3,200/month and renovation potential to $6,000/month.
Britton asked his mom — a bank vice president — if she knew any big landlords. She introduced him to Hank Ballinger, who owned 800+ apartments. For $500 and six weeks of one-on-one sessions, Britton learned the 1% rule, proper due diligence, and how to find properties that both cash flow and appreciate.
Britton paid $500 for a six-week one-on-one mentorship with Hank Ballinger, a landlord with over 800 apartments, who taught him deal analysis, the 1% rule, and the importance of inspections.
Britton negotiated to buy two triplexes and a small cottage together for $265,000, with current rents of $3,200/month and renovation potential to $6,000/month.
Chapter 7 · 20:50
With Hank Ballinger's framework in mind, Britton began hunting for fourplexes in Richmond, Kentucky, where most sell between $350,000 and $400,000. He spotted this one on Zillow — priced at $245,000 and sitting unsold for six months — because the previous owner had left two units in terrible shape, including a hole cut in the ceiling to investigate a toilet leak that was never repaired. That cosmetic disaster repelled other buyers but not Britton, who saw the underlying structure: new roof, new HVACs, and rent potential his mentor confirmed was strong. An FHA loan put him in the door for about $7,000 out of pocket (3.5% down), requiring him to live in one unit for a year. After LVP flooring, wall removal, and fresh fixtures, three units went to Section 8 at $900 each and the one-bedroom rented for $850. Total rents: $3,450/month. A second appraiser later valued the property at $322,000, confirming real equity [1] — Britton Eads "FHA fourplex with 3.5% down (~$7,000): Britton purchased a $245,000 fourplex using an FHA loan, requiring only about $7,000 out of pocket w…" 08:32 .
While touring a triplex, Britton noticed the identical building next door had 7 mailboxes. One quick call confirmed the neighbor owned it too — and was willing to sell both. What started as a $185K listing became a $265K portfolio buy covering 7 units.
Chapter 8 · 24:20
While touring a Zillow listing for a triplex priced at $185,000, Britton Eads did something most buyers don't: he looked next door. An identical building with 7 mailboxes on the porch told him there were more units there than on the listing. A quick call to the realtor confirmed the same owner held both properties and was open to selling together. The second triplex, with two units gutted to the studs, was priced at $80,000. For a combined $265,000, Britton was under contract for 7 income units already generating $3,200/month. Henry Washington connects this moment to a broader truth: deals exist on public platforms, but it takes a trained eye and the habit of always looking beyond the obvious to find them [1] — Britton Eads "While touring a triplex, Britton noticed the identical building next door had 7 mailboxes. One quick call confirmed the neighbor owned it t…" 21:10 . Post-renovation, the portfolio hit $6,000/month in rents and appraised at $545,000 — $240,000 above all-in costs.
Claims made here
After posting his deal in an investor community offering 10% interest-only terms, Britton raised $46,025 in private money within two weeks.
The two-triplex portfolio appraised for $545,000 after renovation, compared to an all-in cost of approximately $305,000.
Every single one of Britton's deals except his first came from Zillow. The key wasn't a secret database — it was a trained eye. Sellers and agents routinely mis-market properties. A property sitting 6 months on Zillow with a hole in the ceiling isn't a bad deal; it's a deal nobody wanted to look at closely enough.
With $1,500 in his bank account and a $265K deal under contract, Britton posted in an investor community offering 10% interest-only for one year. Two weeks later, a wire for $46,025 arrived. No bank, no credit score barrier — just a compelling deal and the right audience.
After posting the deal in a real estate investor community, Britton raised $46,025 in private down payment money within two weeks, paying 10% interest-only for one year.
After renovating the two triplexes and the cottage, the portfolio appraised for $545,000 — well above the $305,000 all-in cost, creating significant equity.
Chapter 9 · 28:20
The financing story for the seven-unit portfolio is where Britton's creativity shines brightest. With effectively no cash available, he joined an investor community, posted the deal's projected ARV ($450K) and projected rents ($6,000/month), and offered a private lender 10% interest-only for one year plus a balloon repayment at refinance. Within two weeks a stranger wired him $46,025. He carried that check to his community bank, which issued a 5-year term / 20-year amortization commercial loan for the balance and stacked a $40,000 construction line on top. The bank's comfort came from the existing $3,200/month in rents — proof the asset performed on day one. Henry Washington uses this moment to explain the essence of community banking: flexible, relationship-driven underwriting that larger institutions won't offer [1] — Britton Eads "With $1,500 in his bank account and a $265K deal under contract, Britton posted in an investor community offering 10% interest-only for one…" 25:55 .
Claims made here
Britton doubled a duplex's rents from $1,400/month to $3,000/month with roughly $8,000 in cosmetic renovations including LVP flooring, appliances, and cabinet refinishing.
By replacing carpet with LVP flooring, adding stainless appliances, and refreshing cabinets and counters, Britton doubled a duplex's rents from $1,400 to $3,000/month.
Britton had $3,000 in the bank when he found a $250,000 duplex. Instead of waiting, he pulled equity from his triplex portfolio and cross-collateralized it with the new deal. The bank combined everything into one portfolio loan, adding $50,000 in debt as the duplex down payment.
Chapter 10 · 31:40
Britton found yet another Zillow deal: a $250,000 two-sided duplex in a market where similar properties sell for $320,000–$340,000, being rented for a combined $1,400/month. He made an offer at asking price the same day two other buyers toured it, moving decisively because the value gap was obvious. The problem: he had $3,000 in his bank. His solution was cross-collateralization — asking his community bank to pull equity from the triplex portfolio and attach it as collateral on the new duplex loan, adding $50,000 in debt to the combined loan rather than requiring a fresh cash down payment. Henry Washington explains this as a portfolio loan and a core bank-relationship strategy. The DSCR lender on this deal had a 6-month seasoning rule that blocked a construction loan, so Britton negotiated $5,000 in seller credits that the bank returned to him in cash at closing — funding the $8,000 cosmetic renovation [1] — Britton Eads "Britton had $3,000 in the bank when he found a $250,000 duplex. Instead of waiting, he pulled equity from his triplex portfolio and cross-c…" 29:22 . Rents doubled.
Britton had $3,000 when he bought his most recent duplex and used a DSCR loan — which came with a 6-month seasoning rule that blocked a construction loan. His solution: negotiate $5,000 in seller credits at closing, which the bank returned to him in cash, funding the entire $8,000 renovation.
Chapter 12 · 36:15
In the episode's most instructive chapter, Britton and Henry move from deal recaps to principles. Britton says his primary filter for every acquisition has always been: does this cash flow? He combined all his properties into a jumbo portfolio loan and executed a single cash-out refinance netting $212,000 in one day while still collecting approximately $2,000/month in net income [1] — Britton Eads "Right after Britton pulled $212K in equity, $15,000 in emergency repairs hit in a single month — $5,000 in plumbing and two failed HVAC com…" 37:50 . Almost immediately, $15,000 in emergency repairs arrived in one month — $5,000 in plumbing, two HVAC compressor failures. He says that without those refinanced reserves, he would have lost everything. Henry Washington frames this as the central thesis of the episode: buying with little to no money is possible, but owning real estate without cash reserves is nearly impossible, because repairs don't wait for your bank account to catch up.
Claims made here
Britton executed a cash-out refinance on a combined portfolio loan and pulled $212,000 in one transaction while still generating approximately $2,000/month in net cash flow.
Britton faced $15,000 in emergency repairs in a single month after his cash-out refinance, including $5,000 in plumbing and two failed HVAC compressors.
Britton was earning $15/hour and approximately $2,000–$3,000/month as a fence installer; his rental portfolio now generates approximately $3,000/month.
Britton combined all his properties into one jumbo portfolio loan and executed a single cash-out refinance that put $212,000 in his pocket in one day, while still generating $2,000/month in net cash flow. That capital then funded reserves and new acquisitions.
Britton combined multiple properties into one portfolio loan and executed a cash-out refinance, pulling $212,000 in a single transaction while still cash flowing $2,000/month.
Right after Britton pulled $212K in equity, $15,000 in emergency repairs hit in a single month — $5,000 in plumbing and two failed HVAC compressors. Without those reserves, he says he would have lost everything. Cash reserves aren't optional; they're the insurance policy on your entire portfolio.
Shortly after pulling out $212,000, Britton faced $15,000 in emergency repairs in a single month — including $5,000 in plumbing and two HVAC compressor failures — underscoring why cash reserves are critical.
Henry Washington reframes cash flow as protection, not profit. If a property pays for itself from day one, you can survive vacancy, repairs, and market downturns without reaching into your own pocket. Cash flow is what lets you hold your properties through adversity instead of being forced to sell.
Britton was earning $15/hour — roughly $2,000–$3,000/month — digging holes and installing fences. Today, his rental portfolio generates $3,000/month, he holds $100,000 in cash from refinances, and two new duplexes under construction will add another $1,200/month. He replaced his job.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
This episode
Local landlord with over 800 apartments who became Britton's paid mentor, teaching him deal analysis, the 1% rule, and due diligence.
BiggerPockets host mentioned by Henry Washington in the context of discussing misclassified listings and finding deals on public platforms.
Author of Rich Dad Poor Dad; cited by Britton as an influence alongside Ken McElroy on BiggerPockets.
Real estate investor and Rich Dad advisor whose BiggerPockets content influenced Britton's decision to renovate and refinance his duplex.
The podcast network and real estate investing platform hosting this episode.
Sponsor: a platform enabling landlords to contribute properties via a 721 exchange into a professionally managed diversified portfolio.
Sponsor: a DSCR lender qualifying borrowers on property income rather than personal W-2 income, offering 80–85% LTV.
BiggerPockets Pro partner offering up to $2,000 off origination fees on DSCR loans for Pro members.
Online real estate marketplace where Britton found nearly all of his deals, including the fourplex and the seven-unit portfolio.
The Robert Kiyosaki book that inspired Britton Eads to pursue real estate investing after his girlfriend's grandmother gave him a copy.
Sponsor: a private real estate fund managing over $1 billion in assets, open to investors starting at $10.
Sponsor: AI-powered landlord accounting software that tracks income and expenses mapped to Schedule E tax categories.
The Kentucky city where Britton Eads invests in rental properties, described as having fourplex prices typically between $350K–$400K.
Stats
This episode
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Britton Eads bought his first duplex for $70,000 without ever visiting the property or getting an inspection, and it turned out to be over 100 years old.
After renovating the duplex for $30,000, Britton raised rents from $1,000/month to $1,800/month but the property still only appraised for $100,000 despite a $100,000 all-in cost.
Britton purchased a $245,000 fourplex using an FHA loan with just 3.5% down, requiring approximately $7,000 out of pocket.
The fourplex generates $3,450/month in total rent, with three 2-bedroom units at $900 each and one 1-bedroom at $850, all on Section 8.
An appraiser initially valued the fourplex at $260,000–$270,000, but a second appraiser revalued it at approximately $322,000.
Britton purchased two triplexes and a cottage for a combined $265,000 in May 2025, with current rents of $3,200/month and renovation potential to $6,000/month.
After posting his deal in an investor community offering 10% interest-only terms, Britton raised $46,025 in private money within two weeks.
The two-triplex portfolio appraised for $545,000 after renovation, compared to an all-in cost of approximately $305,000.
Britton doubled a duplex's rents from $1,400/month to $3,000/month with roughly $8,000 in cosmetic renovations including LVP flooring, appliances, and cabinet refinishing.
Britton executed a cash-out refinance on a combined portfolio loan and pulled $212,000 in one transaction while still generating approximately $2,000/month in net cash flow.
Britton faced $15,000 in emergency repairs in a single month after his cash-out refinance, including $5,000 in plumbing and two failed HVAC compressors.
Britton was earning $15/hour and approximately $2,000–$3,000/month as a fence installer; his rental portfolio now generates approximately $3,000/month.
Britton is building two new duplexes expected to complete in about 3 months and project to add $1,200/month in additional cash flow.
The Fundrise Flagship Fund has grown to manage more than $1 billion in real estate assets on behalf of hundreds of thousands of investors.
In the time of a one-minute ad read, companies made 27 hires on Indeed worldwide.
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