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BRRRR Strategy Explained - Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat

May 27, 2026 • By Investor Sam

Quick Answer

The BRRRR strategy (Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat) involves purchasing undervalued properties, renovating them, renting them out, then refinancing to pull out most/all of your initial capital—allowing you to recycle that cash into another property. On a $200,000 property bought at a 20% discount ($160,000), rehabbed for $40,000, and rented for $1,500/month, you can refinance at 75% of post-rehab value ($210,000) and recover $50,000 in capital to deploy again—all while building long-term rental equity.

The Five Steps of BRRRR

Step 1: Buy

Purchase an undervalued property below market rate. Sources include:

Target: Purchase 20-30% below estimated after-rehab value (ARV).

Real example: Market value of similar homes is $300,000. You find a distressed property and negotiate purchase at $210,000 (30% discount).

Step 2: Rehab

Renovate the property to increase its value and make it rentable. Scope varies:

Target: Spend 10-20% of purchase price in capital on rehab, choosing improvements that maximize rental appeal and value.

Real example: $40,000 spent on kitchen, bathrooms, flooring, and paint brings the property to $300,000 market value.

Step 3: Rent

Lease the renovated property to tenants. Rental income covers:

Target: Achieve positive cash flow (rent > all expenses) or neutral cash flow if building equity is the goal.

Real example: Property rents for $1,600/month. Expenses total $900/month. Cash flow: +$700/month.

Step 4: Refinance

After establishing rental history (typically 6-12 months of payments), refinance the property at 70-75% of current value.

Current property value: $300,000 (post-renovation) Refinance amount: 75% × $300,000 = $225,000 Original loan balance: $160,000 (purchase) + $40,000 (rehab financed) Cash extracted: $225,000 - $200,000 = $25,000

This capital is retrieved and deployed to the next deal, while you keep the rental property and its monthly cash flow.

Step 5: Repeat

Use the recovered capital as the down payment/purchase price for the next property. Each cycle should ideally recover enough capital to repeat.

Real-World BRRRR Example: Complete Numbers

Property 1: Purchase and Hold

  1. Buy: Purchase distressed home for $160,000 (30% below ARV of $230,000)

    • Down payment: $32,000 (20%)
    • Loan amount: $128,000 at 6% over 30 years
    • Monthly payment: $768
  2. Rehab: Spend $40,000 on renovations

    • Financed as construction loan or cash out of pocket
    • Post-rehab value: $230,000
    • Total investment: $72,000
  3. Rent: Lease at $1,500/month

    • Property taxes: $200/month
    • Insurance: $100/month
    • Repairs/maintenance (5%): $75/month
    • Property management (10%): $150/month
    • Total expenses: $525/month
    • Monthly cash flow: $975
  4. Refinance (after 12 months of rental history):

    • New appraisal: $230,000
    • Refinance at 75%: $172,500
    • Payoff original loan: $127,000 (principal remaining after 12 months)
    • Cash extracted: $45,500
  5. The Cycle:

    • Original cash invested: $72,000
    • Cash recovered: $45,500
    • Cash still in property (equity): $26,500
    • Monthly cash flow: $975 (ongoing)
    • Capital available for next deal: $45,500

Property 2: Use Recovered Capital

With $45,500 recovered, you can purchase the next property:

Over 4 cycles (4 years), you've deployed ~$200,000 in capital and own 4 rental properties generating $3,900/month in combined cash flow, plus building equity.

Why BRRRR Works: The Economics

Leverage: Mortgages allow you to control assets 4-5x larger than your cash investment. On $72,000 down, you control a $230,000 asset.

Forced appreciation: Rehab and improved management increase property value immediately, not through market appreciation (which is slow).

Tax benefits: Rental properties offer depreciation deductions, mortgage interest deductions, and operating expense deductions—reducing taxable income.

Inflation arbitrage: You lock in a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage while collecting rental income that typically increases with inflation.

Common BRRRR Mistakes

Mistake 1: Overpaying for the Purchase

Buying at only 10% discount instead of 20-30%. Example:

After spending $40,000 on rehab, property at 75% LTV refinances to $255,000 (75% × $300,000). With bad purchase, you've only recovered $45,000 on $310,000 invested—low return.

Prevention: Spend time finding deals. Work with wholesalers, bird dogs, and real estate agents who specialize in distressed properties.

Mistake 2: Underestimating Rehab Costs

Rehab budgets often exclude:

A $30,000 budgeted rehab often costs $50,000+.

Prevention: Get contractor bids, add 20% contingency, and inspect frequently during renovation.

Mistake 3: Refinancing Too Soon or Too Late

Refinancing before rental history is established (6-12 months) results in higher interest rates or loan denial. Waiting too long postpones capital recovery.

Prevention: Plan the refinance timeline at purchase. Most lenders require 6-12 months of rental history.

Mistake 4: Neglecting Operating Expenses

Beginning investors assume rent = profit. In reality:

On $1,500 rent, expenses are typically $500-$700/month, leaving $800-$1,000 in cash flow.

Prevention: Model all expenses in a property analysis spreadsheet before purchasing.

Mistake 5: Over-Leveraging (Chasing Too Many Properties)

Some investors refinance and immediately buy 3-4 properties, stretching financing too thin. If vacancy or major repairs occur, they can't cover expenses.

Prevention: Build 6-12 months of reserves before aggressively scaling. Each property should support itself independently.

When BRRRR Works Best

Market conditions: Appreciation-driven markets where forced appreciation from rehab is greater than holding costs.

Discount availability: Markets with distressed properties, foreclosures, or properties sold below market (e.g., inherited homes, probate sales).

Tenant quality: Areas with strong rental demand and reliable tenants.

Refinancing environment: Interest rates and lending standards that allow 75% LTV financing on renovation properties.

When BRRRR Fails

Low-demand markets: Rural or declining areas where rental income doesn't cover expenses or property values stagnate.

Cosmetic vs. structural issues: Buying a property with hidden structural, electrical, or plumbing issues that exceed budgets and reduce value.

Rising interest rates: When refinance rates are higher than original financing, refinancing may not make sense economically.

Extended vacancy: If the property takes months to rent or tenants are frequently delinquent.

Financing the BRRRR: Capital and Loans

Initial capital: Typically 20-25% down payment on purchase. Sources:

Rehab financing:

Refinance loan: Traditional mortgage (5.5-7% interest, 30-year terms) based on post-rehab value and 6-12 months of rental income.

Calculate Your BRRRR Potential

Use our BRRRR strategy calculator: https://products.investorsam.com/products/brrrr-calculator

Analyze rental property returns: https://products.investorsam.com/products/real-estate-roi

Calculate cap rates: https://products.investorsam.com/products/cap-rate-calculator

Model real estate ROI: https://products.investorsam.com/products/real-estate-roi

Explore house hacking: https://products.investorsam.com/products/house-hacking-calculator

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How much capital do I need to start BRRRR? A: Typically $50,000-$100,000. This covers 20-25% down payment on a $200K-$400K property, plus contingency for rehab overruns and carrying costs (6-12 months of negative cash flow until refinance).

Q: Can I use a primary residence as a BRRRR? A: Not directly. You must purchase as an investment property from the start. However, you could house-hack a primary residence (live in one unit, rent others), then convert it later.

Q: What if I can't refinance after the rehab? A: You're locked into a cash-flowing rental property but can't recycle capital. This isn't ideal but isn't catastrophic—you've built long-term equity. Plan to refinance within 6-12 months; if you can't, analyze why (appraisal too low, income insufficient, credit issues) and address before purchasing the next property.

Q: Is BRRRR better than long-term buy-and-hold? A: BRRRR accelerates capital deployment but requires more work (finding deals, managing rehab). Buy-and-hold is more passive. Best approach: Do BRRRR for 3-5 years to accumulate 5-10 properties, then shift to buy-and-hold as you have capital deployed.

Sources

  1. BiggerPockets. (2024). "BRRRR Strategy Guide." Retrieved from https://www.biggerpockets.com/brrrr-strategy
  2. National Association of Realtors. (2024). "Investment Properties and Cap Rates." Retrieved from https://www.nar.realtor/
  3. Bureau of Labor Statistics. (2024). "Construction Cost Indices." Retrieved from https://www.bls.gov/
  4. Federal Reserve. (2024). "Mortgage Rates and Lending Standards." Retrieved from https://www.federalreserve.gov/
  5. IRS Publication 527. (2024). "Residential Rental Property." Retrieved from https://www.irs.gov/publications/p527

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