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1Let’s be honest – most people who buy their first rental property picture themselves checking a bank account and not much else. Then month two arrives and someone’s toilet is broken at 11 PM on a Tuesday.
Welcome to the grind.
There’s a reason experienced landlords always laugh a little when a rookie talks about passive income. The money can absolutely be good. But passive? Not always.
The truth is that running a rental – even a single unit – involves more moving parts than most people realize. You’re not just collecting rent. You’re scheduling repairs, screening tenants, tracking leases, keeping records for tax season, and staying current on local housing laws that seem to change every year.
That’s a lot of plates spinning at once.
Nobody warns you how much of this job is just talking to people and managing expectations. A good tenant is worth their weight in gold. They’ll report small issues before they become big ones, pay on time, and treat your property like their own.
Finding them requires a real screening process – not just gut instinct.
The first impression you make matters more than you’d think. Landlords who communicate clearly, respond promptly, and follow through on what they promise tend to attract and keep better tenants. Word gets around, especially in smaller markets.
Send a welcome message. Walk tenants through how to submit maintenance requests. Make it easy to reach you without making yourself available 24/7.
That boundary-setting is actually part of effective property management.
If you’re not setting aside 10 to 15 percent of your rental income for maintenance and repairs, you’re playing a risky game. Things break. Appliances age. Plumbing doesn’t care about your profit margins.
A lot of experienced investors follow a simple formula: reserve roughly 1% of the property’s value per year for maintenance. On a $200,000 home, that’s $2,000 annually just sitting there for emergencies. It sounds annoying until the HVAC dies in July.
The landlords who panic when repairs come up are usually the ones who didn’t plan for them.
Every state – and in many cases every city – has its own rules around security deposits, notice periods, habitability standards, and lease terms. Getting these wrong isn’t just embarrassing. It can be expensive.
Take the time to learn your local laws, or hire someone who already knows them. The cost of proper legal guidance is almost always less than the cost of a tenant dispute that ends up in small claims court.
Technology has made it genuinely easier to stay organized. Rent collection, lease tracking, maintenance requests, financial reporting – all of it can be automated or streamlined with the right software.
The landlords who still run everything through a notebook and a spreadsheet are often the same ones who burn out by year three.
Owning rental property is a real business. The ones who thrive are the ones who approach it that way – with systems, boundaries, and a willingness to keep learning. The stress doesn’t have to be permanent. But it usually starts to lift once you stop winging it and start managing with intention.