May Passive Income – Five figures income!

GA

I did it! Five figures passive income within the first five months!!!

Bam! It’s May, yo’all. Time flies like crazy. It’s been five months since I bought the commercial rental property. The Cat Rescue/Cat Store is running by my tenant. And rent money is rolling in.

On the landlording side – there are a couple of tenant turnovers that I’m working on. A dryer start button went out, so I’m looking to see if I would replace the part or buying a new dryer. I also need a new washer for my new unit. I’m on the last leg of building that room. I need to install the baseboard.

On the workout/exercising front – we’ve been parking our bikes at the apartment so when the timing/weather permit, we often bike after work. It was awesome. Mr.W’s bike gear is giving out, so we’re looking to make a big investment on 2 bikes ($1000/each). I’m looking to see if we can get 2 carbon fiber bikes

The picture is Lee Washington University that we visited over Memorial Day weekend. That was why I didn’t have any blog post for a week. LOL 🙂 I’ll do a Memorial Day weekend trip recap a little later when I have some off time. LOL 🙂

Okay, back to passive income report.

Dividends from 2 companies: $13.70

05/23/2017 HCP                     $3.70

05/15/2017 KMI                   $10.00

Income from Rental Properties

I consider these properties as *passive as I don’t manage the one in the midwest, and the commercial property doesn’t require much involvement from me. I do have to do some fixing here and there for the residential half of it. I’ll talk more about this later.

  • Income from Midwest Rental the $77K investment (This is after insurance, maintenance, and taxes): $700
  • Income from Commercial Rental: $2000
  • Income from 1 of 2 unit: $1300 (This is $300 increased as I added another tenant)

May Total: $4013.70

So far in 2017 total: $13926.83

  • January: $720.58
  • February: $1710.00
  • March: $3749
  • April: $3733.55
  • May: $4013.70

If I leave my investments alone and included my take home income from last year, my portfolio would worth $450K, I would have generate $18,000 with 4% yield. But my yield was around 2% so it would have only be $9,000. So, by shifting my investment, so far this year income is beating last year dividend income.

This month income of $4013.70 is noticeably higher than the $47.75 in dividends I received in May 2016. That’s a 84X increase over YOY. That, right there, is great progress, and I hope I can keep up similar levels of success as I go!

I was able to cover just over 260% of my basic expenses (check out how I kept my lifestyle from inflating) this past month through the power of compounding interest/dividend/passive income. It’s really great to know that I was able to cover a 260% of my basic monthly expenditures by way of complete passive income. The progress of dividend growth investing is real and tangible. The market can decide to mark up or mark down the value of a company day by day, but the dividends and rental income will still roll into my brokerage account just like usual. Passive income are reliable just like my expenses, and that’s one of the reasons I plan to use this strategy as my  income generator through early retirement. I either use dividend income to continue to reinvest to offset old age expenses or if one day I’m tired of managing property, dividend income will serve as my main source of income. It’s funny when my income is now come from 6 businesses rather than just relying on one company (my job). My job which there is always a risk of getting fired or layoff at anytime, but with pay checks coming from 6 different sources, even if I don’t receive pay from 1 or 2, I’m still largely unaffected. That’s the beauty of dividend investing strategy.

**Note: This expense list is a little outdated, as I’m now married to Mr.W. His expenses is higher than mine. However, taking into the consideration of we share the same house expenses like: Housing, Cable, utilities are the same. Only added, his travel, medical, eating out, clothing, and entertainment expenses. I might update this Expenses post in the future posts.

With almost half of the year behind us, I’m now five full months into one of my goals to generate $50K in passive income during the year. The year is 41% over and I am 27% on my way to completing my primary goal. I’m a little behind. I need to step up to get my other empty unit rented. I might have to revise my goal, however, for now, I’m just enjoying crushing 5-figure income (YTD for the first time).

I’ll update my dividend income page to reflect May passive income.

How are your dividend/passive income tallies progressing? Everything progressing the way you had planned?

GA

14 Comments

  1. You are killing it in the real estate Vivianne. Congrats on the 5 figure! The property I bought last year has appreciated in over 6 figures in this crazy housing market as well. 🙂

    • Congrats on the 6-figures appreciation!

      If you can do this 10x, $1M is in the bank! LOL 🙂 It gets easier as you get more efficient.

  2. I don’t think I have ever seen a YoY% increase that high. Congrats, that is impressive. Your properties are really paying off. Not even half way through the year too. Looking forward to seeing how the rest of the year goes. Keep breaking records!

  3. Congrats on hitting your goal of five figures. That sure didn’t take long and your monthly income since January is growing at a nice clip. Seems like the real estate market suits you well. Besides those annoying fixes from time to time it seems that you have good renters. Is the focus still real estate going forward or will some of that income go towards building your dividend holdings again? Thanks for sharing.

    • Do I want to invest more in rental or build up my dividend income. The short answer is ultimately dividend income.

      The long answer is

      The ultimate intention is 100% passive, so dividend growth seems to be the best way to go. However, I’m only 36 yo, so I don’t mind landlording here and there until I’m ready to sell everything and pack it up into a huge dividend/t-note portfolio and just live off of it.

      That is why I’ve been buying stocks when the money come.

      This is also the first year that I make (6-figures income from all investments). So, my tax bill will be high. (I got to set money aside for that). I’m also getting used to writing $6k check at a time for property taxes and insurance.

      Another thing I’m concerning is there are way too many units for me to manage on top of my full time job. So, unless I find a deal that I don’t want to pass up – like a huge building in nice area or a huge piece of land on the river or ocean, I’ll keep buying stocks and try to get my portfolio back up to $500/mo in dividend. By my rough calculation, I can get it done in 24 months given I continue to work full time.

      Eastcoast is also not where I want to retire. I want to move back to The Midwest, where my family is. I have a paid off house there, so after I sell everything here, plus the dividend portfolio by that time, I’d probably can swing a six figure dividend income. That’s hopefully would provide us a comfortable life. The dollar stretch further in the Midwest.

      I’m looking to spend Twenty five k on a property in Puerto Rico, so,we,can spend three months of winter there.

  4. Fantastic income and congrats on hitting the new mark. If u get that other rental going maybe u can hit that goal. That would be huge. Either way your heading in the right direction.

    • Thanks, I hope to rent that unit soon. But I’m still looking for quality tenants. I have a lot of interests but sometimes they wanted big dog or pets in a 2nd and 3rd floor, it does seem like a good fit for it. As, they could ruin the floor very quickly. There is a lot of maintenance that comes with people wanting pets in apartmnent.

      I’m also toying with the idea of turning it into an Airbnb. Since there is no mortgage, if I can host 1 week out of 4 week/mo, that’d be even. If I can host more than that, then that’s extra money.

      We’ll see how’s it going to go.

      cheers!

  5. Oh boy! 84X is a crazy year-over-year increase! I hit 26% and I was happy….imagine getting 84X!! Great moves on the real estate front….shows the power of leveraging vs upfront money for dividend income streams. Kudos on great vision and execution.

    • Thanks for the kind words. But 26% is awesome!! An increase is an increase! If you just let it sit in the bank, you can’t even get 0.2%. So 26% is HUGE!

      I’m not sure about vision LOL 🙂 You might have recalled when I bought the house unsight, and my brother scolded me for days.

      I bought the commercial property and I didn’t see my husband for 2 months. LOL 🙂

      Everything has its price. LOL 🙂 That’s why, I’m just focusing on dividend accumulation now. It’s progressing super slowly, but I’m going to get back there again.

      Cheers!

  6. You go girl! Well done, we will hit the 5 digits for 2020 this month (got to about €9900 by the end of May).

    • Congrats on hitting 5-digits income yourselves! Gotta love the streams of income from different sources and businesses. I only wish to know about the multiple streams of income earlier!!

      Cheers!

    • Yup!! I like real estate income! It looks like you guys are making the entry yourselves! so congrats!!

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