You DON’T have to spend your entire life chasing financial independence. Play your cards right, and you may not even need a whole decade! With a little hard work and sacrifice, today’s guest became a millionaire (and financially free) in just SIX years!

Welcome back to the BiggerPockets Money podcast! After years of “drifting” through life and racking up bad debt, Eric had a moment when he realized he might not be able to rely on his W2 income for as long as he had hoped. Seeing the writing on the wall, he decided to get serious about achieving financial independencebuying rental properties, fixing them up, and eventually flipping them for a huge profit. One “home run” deal catapulted him toward his FI goal and a $1 million net worth!

If you dream of financial freedom but don’t want to spend your whole life getting there, this episode is for you! Eric offers some helpful advice for those who are looking to start their own FIRE journey—including why new investors should buy “grandpa’s house,” how to uncover “rare” real estate deals on the multiple listings service (MLS), and how to get the maximum return on a few years of sacrifice!

Mindy:
Do you ever wonder what it would take to grow your net worth to $1 million? How about in the New York City metro area? What are the steps you would have to take? How aggressively should you be saving? What should you be investing in? Today we’re speaking with a longtime listener who his story is going to show you exactly how he did just that. Hello? Hello, hello. My name is Mindy Jensen and with me as always is my very own million dollar co-host, Scott Trent.

Scott:
Awesome. Well, great to be here with my real estate co-host, Mindy Jensen. As always, we’re here to make financial independence less scary, less just for somebody else to introduce you to every money story because we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter where or when you’re starting or what industry you work in. Today we’re going to talk to Eric who posted in our Facebook group that he hit a big financial milestone in late 2023, I think it was December, 2023 after just six years of getting serious about financial independence and discovering the fire world and concepts there. You can listen to a story about how if you start taking these meaningful steps, maybe getting your PhD in personal finance as you referred to it, you can also achieve a really significant outcome potentially in five, 10 years or maybe even a little less.

Mindy:
Eric, welcome to the BiggerPockets Money podcast. I am so excited to talk to you today.

Eric:
Yeah, I’m super excited to be here too. This is surreal a little bit.

Mindy:
Let’s go back to December, 2023. Just a few months ago, you hit the $1 million mark in your net worth after about six years on your journey, which is awesome. Let’s all celebrate this. Hooray. Yay. What did life look like six or seven years ago?

Eric:
One of the pivotal moments I think for me was I work in advertising, so I’m a creative director and I had never really thought about money before. I had saved a little bit, I had had enough money for down payments for houses in the past, but one of the most pivotal moments for me was I had a coworker who was by far the oldest person that I’d ever seen in advertising, period over the age 50 and one day he was just quietly gone. There was no retirement party, there was no announcement just gone. And when I look at my industry, I realize that no one ever really makes it to 50, and that 40 is when that target sort of appears on your back. You’re old, you’re not cool, you’re expensive, you’re constantly trying to sell things to the new generation of consumers and you’re the easiest cost cutting.
So that was the first realization that I needed to do something. And then the second thing was I had moved from one of my houses to a little further commute, and I had a long drive now, and I drove through this part of the state that had only one radio station, so around 6:00 PM every night you can imagine on a conservative radio station. What’s on the radio is Dave Ramsey course. And so I started listening every day and for all his faults, I feel like a lot of that information was the baseline and what really changed my life and got me into looking for other things and how could I improve my finances.

Scott:
Awesome. I’d love to just keep diving into this part of the journey here. So leading up to this moment where you realized, oh shoot, this is not going to be a 30 year career in advertising sales here, and this person’s exit really struck a cord. What was your overall situation like? You said

Mindy:
You had, what year was this that you purchased this house?

Eric:
This was 2013, so the asking price for this house was 2 65. Again, I was a young kid, I was single. I didn’t have a lot of money. It was across from a cemetery, it was on a busy street. The house was in pretty good shape, but the owner who sadly passed away luckily had taken out a home equity loan and he fixed all the big stuff. So the siding, the windows, the furnace, the driveway. But inside it was super, super dated. And

Scott:
Where is this in proximity to New York City?

Eric:
This is about an hour outside of New York in Connecticut, right on a train line, easy access to the city. So even back then you could get houses for 2 65. I don’t know about that anymore, but this was also 2013 and I think you guys probably remember this. There was still a lot of foreclosures. So this house was dated, but it was nice in terms of all the mechanicals. And I knew right away when I saw this thing, I was like, I got to buy it because I had seen so much rough stuff that I had no money or no business trying to take on as somebody as young as I was. And I didn’t know anything about renovation whatsoever. And I think that what I learned from this house too is kind of like a term I’ve coined is in it’s grandpa’s house. This was grandpa’s house.
Grandpa owned this house, took care of it. He knew what to do. I think that generation was really good at taking pride in where they lived, but it was dated and it was something that I could move into. I could fix it slowly. And yeah, I bought it and over the next four years, my wife at the time was my girlfriend and even friends. We slowly transformed that house. We took a wall down, we redid the kitchen, did the bathroom upstairs. Yeah, I learned so much. That house actually was the best teacher I’ve ever had.

Mindy:
So you said it was on a busy street across the street from the cemetery, and that’s not going to change no matter how much you change the interior. Do you still own this

Eric:
House? I don’t. And I can get to what I did with that later because that’s what got me into basically being a landlord is that house.

Scott:
Well, lemme ask a couple quick questions here. So in 2013 when you purchased this house, you said you put two and a half percent down. Did you have any other meaningful financial assets at this point? Can you give us a snapshot of your financial picture and then maybe you said four years. Can you give us an idea of your financial snapshot around 2017 whenever the next event with this house happens? Yeah,

Eric:
Sure. I think that that house, just to get to the two and a half percent was all the money I had. I don’t even think I had much more. I might’ve had a small 401k that was basically just a match from a prior company that I had never even looked at. And I had probably still at that time, $26,000 in student loans. I had a car note, which was probably 20 grand. So I was definitely negative net worth at this point, and the only money I had was put down on that house. So that was kind of the start. Awesome.

Scott:
And one of the things that I think New York City offers the challenge is housing all these things you’re having to lever up to your eyeballs just to get a house an hour away from the city with it. But New York City also offers incredible career growth and opportunities, and so there’s an investment there. Was that happening for you in your industry at this point in time as well?

Eric:
It was, and that’s actually what kept me in that area is I had a lot more options, flexibility. I wasn’t super concerned about if I lost my job. And I actually only in the time that I lived in Connecticut, I only had two jobs, so I only jumped once. And the second job was really sort of the big agency experience, the fun clients and all of that. So it was definitely advantageous to be that close.

Scott:
Awesome. And can you give us a picture of your income relative to New York’s standards during this

Eric:
Time? Yeah, 2013, I was still sort of a young buck at that time. I think I probably made $80,000 a year. I think that was probably the salary that, and I was barely able to qualify for that 2 65. So that was just me by myself. That was probably what it was in 2013. So I don’t know how much that’s changed, but clearly that was kind of a starting point for me.

Mindy:
And is this when you started listening to Dave Ramsey?

Eric:
No. So Dave Ramsey wasn’t for a while yet. It was probably another four years before I heard about Dave Ramsey. So you could think of 2013 to 2017 as just like drift. I didn’t know what I was doing and I was just kind of moving through the stages of life. I didn’t really have a plan, and that house kind of was the start of it. It kind of got me to budget for projects and buying tools and other things like that. So I really do owe a lot to that house.

Mindy:
Now that Eric has painted us a picture of what his financial situation looked like before he discovered fire. After this quick ad break, we’ll hear about the steps he took to get out of debt and propel himself towards financial freedom.

Scott:
Welcome back to the BiggerPockets Money podcast.

Mindy:
Okay, so in 2017 you start driving and you are listening to Dave Ramsey. What was your aha moment? Where did you take stock of where your net worth was or other than the coworker that was just suddenly gone one day with no notice?

Eric:
Yeah, we moved once after that first house. And what happened was is we were about to have our first child and we got trigger happy like, wait a second, we don’t want to be here. We got to buy another house. Right? Again, another sort of decision without any forethought. We moved a little further north, but to qualify for that mortgage, I had to get a renter in my first house. So that is why I essentially became a reluctant landlord. And I joke because you can go back in my BiggerPockets history, I started an account probably right around then, 27, 20 18, and people roasted me, roasted me, you’re not accounted for CapEx maintenance. That’s not cashflow. I assume cashflow was basically mortgage or rent minus mortgage, and that’s obviously not the case. So that kind of got me started into learning about real estate, but I still wasn’t really learning that much about other personal finance.
So now this is around 2018, let’s just say this is the beginning of that year that rental was making okay money. I think it was 1600 bucks my rent or the mortgage was 1600 and the rent was 2,400. Now I’m about to have a second child, and of course we want maybe another bigger house that’s closer to my wife’s job. She did get a new job. I want to say I had some equity in the houses that I had, the two one that I was about to sell in the first one, but I still had $24,000 in student loans, which blows my mind. I had a car note again, I had a new car and now I was about to have higher expenses with a family of four. This is when I started to get, I think a lot of people feel this way, old Dave just wasn’t doing it anymore.
I didn’t have any new advice. It’s almost like you get to the baby, the last baby step, which is invest in Grow Rich. And it’s like, well, what is that? So this is where I did, I’m bored at home one night and I’m like, best money podcasts. And of course the first two results are a show that just started BiggerPockets money. And then the other one was mad scientist. And so the first two episodes I ever listened to of a personal podcast or personal finance podcast that wasn’t Dave Ramsey. The guests were Mr. Money Mustache and JL Collins. So this is where the fuse was lit. All those years leading up to that where I kind of did stuff right, I got lucky A lot of times buying that house was luck. I had no idea what I was doing. I was lucky that I didn’t lose any money with the tenant there. That’s kind of where it just went into turbocharge. It was reading, it was listening, I listened to you guys and then I choose a phi, all that stuff. It was just daily. And I slowly just picked up things and started going with information that I learned. So

Scott:
I want to observe something here because I think Dave Ramsey has done a lot of good for a lot of people out there in terms of helping their financial positions. But the carrot of, hey, you can become a millionaire and probably less than a decade with a little bit of luck in some hustle, in a couple of swings in addition to the formula of saving and investing here really I think is something that Mr. Money mustache and I’ll credit BiggerPockets before I ever joined as an employee kind of got into my head and I think it just totally changes the motivation in the game to a certain degree. And I wish that was presented to people who are in debt upfront where it’s like, yeah, you’re going to have to slog through this for two years to chunk out your debt, but if you do that, then you have another six or seven and you’re going to be really cranking it out with a couple hundred thousand dollars in net worth and the snowball is going to be getting churning here. And it sounds like that that’s what got you going there. Do you think that if that had been presented to you in that fashion 5, 6, 7 years earlier that your trajectory would’ve changed? That would’ve been highly motivating.

Eric:
A hundred percent because Dave Ramsey, I didn’t mention this. The reason why that was a pivotal thing is from the moment I started listening to those episodes, that was when I want to say this was 2018, I did everything I could to be a popper essentially that year to pay off all the debt. I sold my car, you just

Scott:
Probably bit me for a

Eric:
Corolla. It was a souped up Volkswagen Golf, so it was still a $35,000 car. I sold that. I took the equity and the little cash I did have, and I paid off my student loans. So that year, that was the whole job was the student loans were gone, the car was gone. So from 2018, I kind of started fresh from a consumer debt perspective. I did cut up all the credit cards. I’d never used them until I learned about travel rewards. But yes, as soon as I would’ve known a little bit earlier that next phase was there. I think it would’ve happened a lot faster. It took me a couple years to figure that out.

Scott:
Those moves are the life changers right here. That’s why I want to drill into it because the housing is another one that’s huge and I do want to get into that and hear what you did there, if anything. But that’s sometimes really hard because you need to uplift your family and actually change where you live. The car is something that almost anybody could change overnight and do and have a several hundred thousand dollars outcome in 5, 6, 7 years alongside. I’m sure there’s other lifestyle changes that we’ll get into here, but I just love it if you’re trying to change your trajectory and you’re not willing to do what Eric did and sell the fancy car and use that cash to chunks to begin the snowball effect, you’re just going to be treading water for a lot longer. If extended your journey by probably three, four years, potentially 2018, you sell the car, you’re starting to make these moves, what else happens? Where does the journey take us from here?

Eric:
So the real estate side of it, I kept that house and in 2020, that’s sort of like Covid just hits. And this is where again, this is something I learned from the podcast, the two out of the five year rule, right? Cap gains exclusion. I had bought that in 2013 and I had lived there for two years, three, four years, whatever it was, but it was still counted for two. And then 2020 was my last year to be able to sell it. And so my first house that I had rented all that time, I decided to sell it. So I paid 2 65, but at that time the mortgage was down to two 20, sold it for three 80. So after realtor fees, I probably netted 1 30, 1 40. This is well into financial independence PhD, where I’m like, I’m not going to touch that money. I’m going to take all of that and put it and go shopping for my next rental.
So I never took a penny from that one. The second house that I bought, we did the same thing. Mindy talks about doing live-in flips. That’s what we were doing. We’d fix each house, do what we could ourselves, and then when we’d sell it, it would be a little bit more than probably what it was worth if we hadn’t done anything. The second one, the numbers are okay, but we had enough equity in the second house that I didn’t use all of it for the next house. We put 20% down and then I kept some of it. So those two things combined. Plus in that time we did 401k match or maxed out, 4 0 3 Bs we opened Ross, we did HSAs. I got continual raises and promotions, and now we had this spread that we weren’t spending and we were putting towards all those things. Yeah, 2020 is where things went crazy. Obviously the stock market did too after that, but I think for us personally, that’s where things really started to take off.

Mindy:
Do you have a fine number? Have you gone through the 4% rule and created a number that you will get to make yourself feel financially independent?

Eric:
I don’t anymore. And I think partly because of inflation I’ve given up. You look at what your spending is now and you’re like, okay, I think I need another year of tracking spending to figure out a more realistic number. But I did at one point. Obviously, I think a lot of people that, especially who live in the Northeast, a million dollars isn’t going to cut it, right? $40,000 a year, 4% is not all that much money, but I think 2 million ish now you’re getting into a more comfortable spending level where if you had a little bit of extra coming in from rentals or you’re able to do something, I think that that would be totally doable. So I would say that that’s probably more in the ballpark, at least for today. But again, who knows what the future holds, but that would probably be a target next.

Mindy:
And with your $1 million net worth, what comprises that number?

Eric:
I would say 60% of that is equity in real estate, primary residence. And then I do have a larger rental, which I can talk about that was a home run. It was a lucky home run, but that accounts probably 60% of it. The rest of it, think 10% of it’s cash. That’s my cash number is 10% net worth is my cash. And then the rest of it is in equities and all the different accounts. Alright,

Scott:
We’ll be right back after the break.

Mindy:
Welcome back to the show everyone.

Scott:
Awesome. So just to pick up the story here, 2018 comes around, you get really into it, you get your PhD in personal finance as you referred to it here, the snowball begins to begin churning here and we’ve skipped over a couple of things. There’s this real estate deal and there’s a move that happens even farther northeast away from New York City. Can you tell us about those and any other big milestones on the journey to this million dollar number?

Eric:
Yeah, so this was the fun one. So this is right coming up into 2020 again, and a lot of people had nothing to do, right? We’re sitting at home, I decided to sell that house. So I took all the equity from that and I started shopping and in my new town,

Scott:
What was that gain for the, oh, that was the $130,000 ish gain that we just talked about.

Eric:
So I moved to this bucolic town in Connecticut. It has the picture postcard, main Street, all the grand Victorian houses on it. And what’s interesting about this place is there’s never any rentals ever and it’s within commuting distance in New York City. And one house popped up on the market and it was a big 18 99, 3300 square foot Victorian house and it was a mess. It was zoned office first of all, which I thought was weird. Why is it on the MLS, but it’s zoned office. And then I just kicking the tires. I had no agent. I called the listing agent being like, has anyone come to see this thing? I live two minutes down the road, can you show it to me 15 minutes? I just want to do a walkthrough. She’s like, sure, you’re really the only person that’s even come to see it. So I went to go look at it and yeah, it was like four offices all cut up on the first floor.
The second floor was an apartment though. It was definitely an apartment. So I went to the town and I said, can you pull the records on this thing? I know you have a really strict zoning in this town. What is technically this thing zoned as? And I said, could this be used as a duplex or a triplex? And the town got back to me after days with a report saying yes, it was never actually technically rezoned to office. It is since 1964 in our records, a duplex. So I was like, okay, awesome. That’s first step. Second step was, oh by the way, it’s actually in a estate sale and it’s in probate still. So there’s a bunch of waiting around for a lot of information on this thing. So because of all this hassle, it ended up being the last piece of an old estate that was all of it had been sold off and this was the last annoying piece that they wanted to get rid of.
And once I found all this out, I was like, I’m just going to low ball ’em. I said they wanted 400,000 for this house. I offered 300,000 since it was in probate. I kind of threw a stink about that. I don’t even know if you can actually technically sell this thing. So they counted at three 15 and I was like, I’ll take it. Yeah, I’m going to take this for sure. I had projected at that time if that were renovated, it was worth 600, at least 5 50, 600. But I didn’t know at that time. I didn’t know any, I had a guess about what it could cost to renovate it, but here’s a BP plug. So as soon as they accepted that offer, I had an inspection done and I used that inspection. And then I’d remembered back in my sort of early days of real estate reading, I read Jay Scott’s book, the book on flipping houses, and he had a spreadsheet, downloadable spreadsheet in there to build a scope of work.
So I downloaded that and I took the inspection line for line and made a scope of work out of that. And then I added all the things that I wanted to do to the house. Where are the bathrooms going to go or the kitchens are going to go. I’m fortunate, I use vector graphics programs, I can do a floor plan. So I designed a floor plan over an old drawing and I put where I wanted the kitchens and bathrooms were, and then I put that in the scope and this thing ended up being 19 pages long. It was 19 pages. And every contractor that I met to go over what the bids were going to be would laugh at me. They’re like, we’re not going to give you a scope on this. No one’s ever even done this before. And the one who did it, I was super lucky because he actually made the contract exactly like the original scope.
So I knew exactly from this item to this item, I knew what cost it was going to be. And that made that process really good when we went to renovate it. So to finance this thing, I ended up using hard money. My friend was a partner, he was 50% of the money, but I got 60% of the equity because I did basically all the work. He was happy with that and everything was good. We had the contractor lined up. We were about to close on this thing. And here’s the trick that I learned or the rub that I learned about a town like this where there are no rentals. So the hard money lender backed out the week of closing because they were using comps from far away. And the final underwriter said, no, we don’t have enough comps here. We don’t know what the rents are going to be.
This deal could be bad. He’s not going to make any money. And so they just walked away. And so here I’m stuck with a closing date. I had to delay that. I had to scramble to find another hard money lender. And I got so lucky because my attorney who was working with me on the closing said, I have a relative, there are a bunch of old New York accountants that do hard money on the side. It’s like a little small private fund. All you got to do is old school, go meet ’em, walk through your finances, shake your hand and be true to your word and they’ll probably give you the money. And they did. So I delayed closing by a couple of weeks. I closed on the house. But what they did require is they did in escrow the first six months of interest payments upfront.
So I had to come up with more than 20% because I put all the six months of interest upfront. So then the draws were easy, they just took the money out every month. I didn’t have to pay them. And then the construction was fairly straightforward. I don’t think I ran into any major problems. I did had a scope of work trading where you take one thing that you wanted and say, oh, but you got to spend more on this a couple times, but it wasn’t bad. So yeah, we got it renovated. I think at the end of it we, it ended up being about 200,000 to do it. So we’re in it three or five 15. And then I rented it in three weeks. I had renters in three weeks, and the gross rent was just shy of $6,000 at that time. So this is 2021.
And how long did the renovation take? Started in January. I was done in July. You had renters in there by August? Yes, yes. I actually had one renter in before it was even done because the real estate agent who sold me the house knew a friend who was also an agent who sold their house. The kids moved away and they wanted to downsize, and she knew what I was doing to the house and she said, oh, go check out Eric’s house. And so she walked through it while it was still tore up. She’s like, I’ll take it.

Scott:
And this is a burr, right? This ends up, is that right?

Eric:
So it was supposed to be, this is where it gets fun again, this is the town coming back again, like this town where there are no rentals. So I go to refinance it and right before closing again, they couldn’t find enough comps. So the money that I wanted to pay back the hard money lender plus have a little bit extra, they basically gave me just barely enough to pay back the hard money lender. So I walked away with zero extra money from the burr, but the silver lining was the mortgage is only $320,000. I think it’s worth probably seven 50 now. So that’s where, if you think about the equity spread and part of my net worth, a lot of it’s in there.

Mindy:
Okay, so I have a bunch of comments about this because I’m hearing things that maybe somebody who is a little newer to real estate might not hear or might not be able to read between the lines. You were the only person to go see this house on the MLS. The only people that can enter information into the MLS are real estate agents. And I am a real estate agent. I have seen so many mistakes on the MLS, from fat fingers, from lazy entries. This was zoned office. If I’m looking for a house, that’s not even going to show up on my search. So you’re in there seeing these properties that other people aren’t seeing right there. Number one great tip. The second floor was an apartment you actually walked through. If I know it’s zoned office, oh, it’s all offices. I’m going to write it off.
You took the time to go in and dive into it. You said, I know the town is really strict and I know there’s not a lot of rentals, but it’s still a desirable neighborhood. You said it was built in 1899 and you didn’t have any problems with construction. And that is a unicorn, my friend. If your house is built in 1899, this is not a lipstick on a pig flip. This is a hardcore renovation. You made a 19 page scope of work. There’s a lot of contractors that are going to look at that like you found out and be like, oh, this is ridiculous. You found one that didn’t say that. Keep talking to contractors. Don’t just interview three and pick the cheapest of those three. Pick somebody who can actually do the work that you need done. Make a realistic scope of work. Make a realistic budget. You couldn’t do that for $20,000. And I see people buying houses and they’re like, oh, I’ll just put 20 into it. Well, you can just put 20 into it if that’s all it needs. But if it needs $400,000 worth of work, 20 isn’t even worth putting into it.

Scott:
And this is a super inefficient market that you found here, right? This is the only, that’s all the problems you had with this deal are because there’s no comps for it. That’s also where the biggest spreads are and opportunities are and your specific skillset, proximity to it and opportunism made this deal achievable for you and almost nobody else. This is wonderful opportunity comes knocking when you have some cash and a long history of earn more than you spend and a progression along this continuum. You wouldn’t have been able to seize this opportunity 10 years ago. Right. This was because of the trajectory you put yourself on three or four years before that this lucky chance was available for you to

Eric:
Seize. Yeah, it was definitely. And what’s interesting is I remember this, I wasn’t scared because of that little first house I, I sort of took my lumps from people saying, you don’t know what you’re doing. And I just went and learned as much as I could to the extent that I felt comfortable doing this. But I also learned to enjoy construction, if that sounds weird. Because of what I used to do myself. I started getting into, I had friends who were in construction, how do you guys actually work? How does your business work? What are the sort of tips to find the best contractors? But also I knew what I was talking about when I said I need this instead of that. So that helped a lot too. It was just basic knowledge of construction so that I wasn’t getting ripped off with the Reno, but I did get lucky. I know that a lot of people today are struggling with finding good contractors and even finding any at all. So this was luck because it was 2020 where everything was slowed down. And I remember my GC came back towards the end. He goes, Eric, if I were to bid this job today, it would be like two 60. There’s no way I could do this job today for how much I quoted you back last year because of everything. So it was luck. A lot of it.

Mindy:
Luck is when preparation meets opportunity. You would not have been able to take advantage of it. Like Scott said, if you didn’t have the money to put in there in the first place. But also would you have had the confidence to tackle it if you hadn’t taken on that house? And I am right there with you. I have a lot of construction experience because I used to have a lot more time and now I’m trying to find contractors to do the work. And it’s like you said, it’s very difficult, but YouTube University is a great teacher.

Scott:
So any other big moves that we should be aware of? And if not, could you just paint a picture of what your life is like today and what’s next?

Eric:
Yeah, so unfortunately the year after that house was all settled, I ended up getting a new job and I moved away. So I still have it, I’m just further away and I manage it remotely. But I ended up taking a new job, moved up to New Hampshire where it was kind of a lateral move, but with all the things that are included in it, there’s no state income tax and it’s more access to Maine and Boston and it’s kind of a lifestyle change. But even from a financial perspective, it’s worked out really well. And yeah, we’re just kind of doing the same thing we’ve always been doing, trying to save a little bit, put it in the different buckets. Max out our 4 0 1 Ks, put money into the brokerage when we can. We did buy a primary residence that of course we did the same thing. We renovated this thing. I won’t even get into that project, but it’s been almost as much as the other is the rental, the big old house. I like old houses now, what can I say? We live in a 19 hundreds house now.

Scott:
They’ve paid you very well, these old houses. I’m sure that this one has also peed you very well in the sense that you’re able to live a great lifestyle for much cheaper than if you hadn’t tackled it. You had another project it sounds like.

Mindy:
What advice would you give to somebody who is just starting their financial journey

Eric:
In terms of a first home? I know a lot of people that’s like their biggest struggle. I keep going back to the grandpa’s house advice. I have so many friends who are younger who are looking for that forever house and they’re just waiting and waiting and especially now, you’re not going to find it a, and you’re going to pay a lot for it. B, happy with something that’s in decent shape. It’s easier to fix, easier to manage. It’s going to teach you a lot if you do some work yourself. That was to me my biggest lucky thing that I did, which is buy that small house and learn on it. So that’s one advice. Piece of advice is the grandpa’s house. I love that analogy. Don’t be afraid to take action on information. It’s almost like I tried everything I could. I tried everything I heard, whether I succeeded at it or not.
Don’t be afraid to make moves big or small. And then I think some of my advice for specifically people in my industry is just remember that Reaper’s comment sooner than you think and prepare for it. I actually, I find myself secretly like going into advertising forums and trying to help people because I think one of the big cultural things about my job is that we are constantly trying to sell things to people that don’t need them, right? That’s really what advertising is. But you sort of become that culture yourself. You’re always hyped up about the next thing everyone’s got to do. Sneakers that just came out and no one talks about money at all. And that was a big sort of awakening when all these things started happening. I’m like, no one in my industry talks about money and I think it’s time they should because the end of their road is sooner maybe. And so start thinking about that if you’re in the marketing or creative industry because money’s important and your future’s important. I love

Scott:
That. Can I add one more that I’ve picked up here? You lemme know if you agree, which is sell the car,

Eric:
Sell the car, sell the car, and wait three cars and pay cash for what you want. I think in three cars, if you’re able to sell the what you have now, drive a cheap one, a slightly better car. The next time, the next car that you buy, you’ll have more than enough money to pay cash for whatever you want.

Mindy:
Awesome. Eric, this was a really, really fun show. Thank you so much for your time today.

Eric:
Yeah, this is like a full circle. It’s weird. Well,

Scott:
Congratulations on all your success and thank you so much for listening all these years and now sharing your story with the community. It is so wonderful to hear those full circle moments. So look forward to hearing from you in another couple of years when you cross two or two and a half or whatever it

Eric:
Is. Yes. Thank you so much. This has been fun.

Mindy:
Alright Eric, we will talk to you soon. Alright, Scott, that was Eric and his awesome story. What did you think of the

Scott:
Show? It was just so wonderful. I mean, this is why we do what we do to see somebody understand that this is available to them and then be a small part of that journey or a voice in their ears as they just build the healthy habits that progress their wealth snowball along here. Love to see that he had a couple of wins in real estate along that journey and that he was wise enough to see the booms and the busts in his industry, the advertising industry very early in life and began planning around that. So that’s awesome. And I hope that he just enjoys it over the next 10, 20 years because he’s clearly coast fi and super happy about it, it seems.

Mindy:
Yeah, and he didn’t take giant risks. He took chances. That story near the end about the home run real estate deal, he would not have been able to do that had he not been a little more conservative in the beginning of his journey, buying a house instead of renting. And not that renting is always bad, but he decided he didn’t want to rent anymore. He wanted to buy a house. So he did. But he bought, I mean, his story is so similar to mine. I didn’t want to rent anymore, so I bought a house. I bought the only house that I could afford and it was very ugly and I didn’t want to live in an ugly house, so I made it nice. And then all of a sudden you’ve got all these skills that you can then turn into a way to turn your home into an investment property. So his live-in flips are turning his primary residence, which is not normally an investment into an investment. He takes that money, puts it to a rental property, takes more money, buys another house, fixes it up and on and on. And now he’s got this net worth of a million dollars in six years. It took me longer,

Scott:
By the way, we found Eric’s story from the BiggerPockets Money Facebook group. We’d also love finding stories in the BiggerPockets forums at biggerpockets.com/forums. If you have a win like Eric’s, like a success story building hundreds of thousands or a million dollars in net worth over the last five to 10 years, we want to hear from you. Please share ’em. And we’d love to hear your money story here on the BiggerPockets Money podcast. Similarly, times have changed with the higher interest rate environment. If you’re someone who just got started on the money journey, maybe in 2021 or 2022 and have kind of begun building wealth into this headwind of the rising interest rate environment, we’d love to hear about it. Even if your story is 50 or a hundred thousand dollars in accumulation in a couple of investments. And I think it’s super powerful to take someone like Eric, go back in time, paint the picture of what his life was like 6, 7, 8 years ago when he caught the financial independence bug, the changes he made and has moved forward. I think it’ll be equally powerful to hear stories about folks who have done that even more recently in the last year or two, and to see what they’re up to and what their approach looks like. So please reach out Scott at BiggerPockets, [email protected]. Both of our email addresses there, go to the Facebook group, facebook.com/groups/bp money or go to biggerpockets.com/forums and tag us in those posts. We want to hear from you. Well, Mindy, should we get out of here?

Mindy:
We should. Scott, that wraps up this episode of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast. Be sure to follow BiggerPockets money on Apple or Spotify to make sure that you never miss an episode. He is the Scott Trench and I am Mindy Jensen saying we got to kick it. Little Cricket BiggerPockets money was created by Mindy Jensen and Scott Treach, produced by Hija, edited by Exodus Media Copywriting by Nate Weinraub. And lastly, a big thank you to the BiggerPockets team for making this show possible.

 

 

 

 

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Note By BiggerPockets: These are opinions written by the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of BiggerPockets.



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