Close Menu
  • Home
  • Financial
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Real Estate
  • Debt Relief
  • Subscribe Now
What's Hot

AI is making promises your brand never made. Hotels are paying the price | Fortune

June 13, 2026

What Makes a Floor Plan Feel Outdated?

June 12, 2026

Your Pool Is an Asset—It’s Also a Lawsuit Waiting to Happen

June 12, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
creditreddit.org
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • Financial
  • News
  • Personal Finance
  • Real Estate
  • Debt Relief
  • Subscribe Now
creditreddit.org
Home » Deal Diary: You’re Never Too Old to Chase FIRE
Personal Finance

Deal Diary: You’re Never Too Old to Chase FIRE

joshBy joshJune 1, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Copy Link Email
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
Deal Diary: You’re Never Too Old to Chase FIRE
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link


In This Article

Name
Neil Whitney

Location
Picayune, Mississippi

Occupation
HVAC business owner & real estate investor

Assets
23 doors (2 fourplexes, 6 duplexes, 3 single-family homes)

Investment strategy
Long-Term Rentals

Financing
Conventional loans & HELOCs

At age 47, Neil Whitney was running an HVAC company in Slidell, Louisiana, and working every hour he had. He and his wife weren’t struggling in any dramatic way. They were just stuck living paycheck to paycheck, with no cushion and no retirement plan. 

Then one rainy weekend, his wife dragged him to the back room to watch a Lifetime movie. A man gets hit by a dump truck, loses his job, and ends up living in a minivan under a bridge with his family. It freaked Neil out, and he felt like he was one bad accident away from being like that guy.

The next Monday, his boss happened to hand him a copy of Rich Dad, Poor Dad. After reading, he told his wife that they needed to get into real estate. She said fine, but on one condition: He couldn’t touch their bank account. So he signed up for Uber, and 18 months later, he had $16,000 saved and bought his first rental property.

Less than a decade later, Neil owns 23 doors and clears $8,000 a month in passive income. Here’s how he did it.

You had no savings and couldn’t touch your bank account. How did you fund your first deal? 

I drove Uber every free moment I had: Friday nights, Saturdays, Sundays. I had a spot near a swamp tour that came in every day at 11, and I’d grab that airport run into the city every single week. 

After about 18 months, I had saved enough to buy a little 900-square-foot, two-bedroom house in Pearl River, Louisiana, for $70,000. I put $14,000 down on a conventional loan. The previous owner had already fixed it up with new tile, crown molding, and fresh paint, so we were able to rent it out for around $800 a month and cleared about $100 after the mortgage. It wasn’t life-changing money, but we were in the game.

How did you go from one single-family home to 23 doors? 

The second deal changed everything. I discovered how much equity I had built in my primary home and pulled a HELOC to buy a fourplex listed on the MLS for $312,000. Put 25% down using that line of credit, kept the tenants already in place at $650 per unit, and renovated each unit as people moved out with new cabinets, countertops, and vanities. 

Our rents went from $650 to $1,000 per unit. The fourplex now brings in $4,000 a month. We paid off the HELOC pretty fast and kept repeating the same formula: Find a deal on the market, buy it with conventional financing, fix it up over time, raise the rents, repeat.

What do you tell someone who thinks they’re too old or too broke to start? 

Make a decision. Not “I’ll try.” Just make a real decision. 

At 47, I had nothing. I drove Uber in the middle of the night to scrape together my first down payment. Nobody handed me anything. But I decided I was never going to be that guy in the movie, and I never looked back. 

If I can do this, anybody can. The basics really do work. You buy properties, get them to cash flow, treat your tenants like the best customers you ever had, and never sell. 

It’s not rocket science. It’s just boring fundamentals executed consistently over a long period of time.

You might also like

Chase Deal Diary Fire Youre
Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Email Copy Link
josh
  • Website

Related Posts

Your Pool Is an Asset—It’s Also a Lawsuit Waiting to Happen

By joshJune 12, 2026

Real Estate Investors’ Purchases Drop to a Six-Year Low—Here’s Why Now Is a Great Time to Buy

By joshJune 11, 2026

A New Report Says That Retirement Could Cost $2.5 Million by 2043—Here’s How Real Estate Investing Could Help You Get There

By joshJune 10, 2026

Devon Kennard, The NFL Linebacker Who Built a 50 Rental Portfolio

By joshJune 9, 2026

Why Two Identical Properties Can Produce Completely Different Returns

By joshJune 8, 2026

Buy 1 Rental Every 2 Years and Watch What Happens

By joshJune 5, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

How to Build a More Predictable Financial Routine

November 24, 2025233 Views

Social Security payments to go up 2.8% next year while polls show three-fourths of seniors think 3% isn’t enough to keep up with rising prices | Fortune

October 24, 202542 Views

Trump Floats 50-Year Mortgages: Cash Flow Boost or Affordability Illusion?

November 13, 202540 Views

Why Mortgage Rates are Rising as the Fed Keeps Cutting

November 4, 202533 Views
Don't Miss

AI is making promises your brand never made. Hotels are paying the price | Fortune

June 13, 20264 Mins Read0 Views

For decades, hotels competed on a familiar set of variables: visibility, price, reputation, and conversion.…

What Makes a Floor Plan Feel Outdated?

June 12, 2026

Your Pool Is an Asset—It’s Also a Lawsuit Waiting to Happen

June 12, 2026

Controversy swirls over Spanish soccer club accused of using novel $600,000 Kalshi wager to bet on its relegation | Fortune

June 12, 2026
Demo
Our Picks

AI is making promises your brand never made. Hotels are paying the price | Fortune

June 13, 2026

What Makes a Floor Plan Feel Outdated?

June 12, 2026

Your Pool Is an Asset—It’s Also a Lawsuit Waiting to Happen

June 12, 2026
Most Popular

The markets’ reaction to Trump hides a darker truth that puts the American economy at risk, Piper Sandler warns | Fortune

August 26, 20250 Views

Investors Are Controlling the Housing Market

September 4, 20250 Views

Local Politics is Ruining the American Dream With Overbearing Regulations

September 4, 20250 Views
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Subscribe Now
© 2026 ThemeSphere.

Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.