Bonfire97 said:
I may have the opportunity to purchase a fairly new mobile home park. Occupancy is 100% and income looks good. I have never attempted something like this. Any idea on what a fair price would be in terms of a multiple of annual income? Are there attorneys out there that could guide someone through something like this? Thanks in advance.
I would recommend reading through Mobile Home Academy stuff, it's pretty good.
Fair price and multiple of income approaches are highly variable based on location and quality. Cap rate is the inverse of multiple and the metric most people use.
Revenue - Operating expenses (not including mortgage payments) = net operating income (NOI)
NOI / purchase price = cap rate.
So if you have a park that made $50,000 NOI and sells for $500,000 you have a 10% cap rate. That same $50,000 NOI for $1,000,000 is a 5% cap rate. If you know an area has an 8% cap rate and a MHP made $30,000 in NOI, a fair price would be $375,000.
Cap rates are usually market specific and product specific. A big park with huge amenities and high lot rent overlooking the Pacific Ocean will command a lower cap rate than rural Kentucky.
Things to consider:
Park owned vs. tenant owned. When doing a cap rate analysis you should only be considering lot rent from part of your park owned homes as part of your valuation. This is to standardize analysis across different types of parks.
For park owned homes add to your lot rent cap rate analysis the FMV of the homes if you could actually sell them. This would be cash in your pockets if you sold them.
Septic, water treatment is going to add significantly more complexity than city water / sewer.
Don't underestimate the operational complexity. Who is managing/ maintaining / collecting rent? Are they good? Do you trust them?
Is there opportunity to add additional pads to the park? For ~$15-20k you can build an extra pad if there is room. If you collect $400 lot rent at an 8% cap rate on this build, you've added $60k of value to your park if you choose to resell / cash out refi.