4 Ways to Make Money Off Your Home Without Being a Landlord

Written by Sorcha Porter, licensed assistant to Shannon Dooley.

One of my favorite things in the world is finding creative ways to make money. It’s part of what I love about home ownership. When you own your home you can dictate how it’s used and you can leverage it to create additional income. In fact thats kind of our team’s whole goal, to teach people how to leverage real estate to create their own Tiny Empires!

Normally people associate making money off of real estate with the following… Flipping real estate, long term rentals, short term rentals like Airbnb, and or house hacking. But many people don’t want to be landlords. Whether it’s for ethical reasons or personal landlord-ing is not for everyone. But it doesn’t mean you can’t use your home to create a side hustle and generate passive or low- work income. Here’s a few ideas to get you started! And if you’re interested in more, definitely check out my Podcast The Laddercast, on Spotify and apple podcasts for additional ideas!

1. Rent your yard by the hour as a dog park!

Idk about you buy I have 3 corgis and they are adorable nightmares. Going to the dog park is great for getting their energy out but since there’s 3 of them and they’re kind-of tiny bullies it’s very stressful. If someone there has a reactive dog, it’s dangerous. Enter Sniff-spot! It’s and app/ platform like Airbnb for your yard! You can list your back yard as a private by the hour dog park! Yah- you can RENT YOUR BACK YARD BY THE HOUR TO A CUTE PUPPY. I’d love to make $50-100 a day and watch cute puppies play in my back yard. That sounds real cool to me!

2. Have a spare parking spot? Why not rent it!?

When I worked in the corporate world I paid $180/ month for parking in an unsecured parking garage. It was bananas. I had to pay nearly 3 days wages at that time, to just come to work. That’s the story for a lot of people! I wish I’d had the option of somewhere else nearby to rent a spot especially since there were several residential properties near my office with empty driveways because many of those folks either worked elsewhere or didn’t have cars because the area was so walkable. Why not help a local worker and yourself?! got a spare driveway spot!? Rent it for $125-150, or 20-30% less than the surrounding parking garages! Throw pics of your driveway on facebook marketplace or Prked! It’s a platform that allows you to list your parking spot in your driveway. So if you live in a place where people who live/ work nearby and there is limited parking they can pay you to rent it while saving money themselves on market rates for parking spots!

3. Got RV Parking? Why not list it for locals visiting your area!

CampSpot much like other sharing economy apps provides a modem for people to rent space on their property much like airbnb to overnight campers. You can select if your space is available for tent, van, rv, etc. and people looking to stay in your area can book it online! The cool thing about Campspot and having RV parking in the city of Portland is that the nearest RV park for overnight parking to the City is actually in Troutdale over 25 mins away. So for people coming for conferences, festivals and events that’s a schlep and makes it hard to get in and out of Portland as there’s not a great public transit system near the outer region RV parks. This means on an event weekend or holiday you could easily bring in several hundred dollars just renting your empty RV parking area! SO COOL!

4. Grow a cut flower garden in your yard and sell bouquets!

I recently stumbled across the Vlog of this really rad woman at “Shifting Roots” on Youtube. She is a stay at home mom with three small children and has a small cut flower business that she started during the pandemic. She grows cut flowers in her garden and sells bouquets to neighbors, friends, and at pop ups and farmers markets. She also does flower arrangements for weddings and events. She started the business during the pandemic and very clearly breaks down the financials of her cut flower business. It also has the added bonus of making her garden look flipping incredible. The startup cost was very low, just a couple hundred dollars and she averages $15/ per bouquet and 30 bouquets per week to a 4×8 planter bed! Her first year she made $4600 profit and has grown it ever since. So if you’re someone who loves flowers, and enjoys the creative process of flower arranging or who wants to learn/get into that this is a great side hustle! If you want to check out the vlog here’s a link. I don’t know about you, but I’ve never paid less than $25 for a bouquet of flowers here in Portland, so it seems like a great opportunity for you green thumbs who would enjoy gardening with flowers anyway to make side hustle income!!

I hope these ideas have opened your mind to income possibilities that you hadn’t thought of and help you expand your horizons on the advantages of home ownership. The reality is, you can’t do a lot of these things on a normal rental lease. You can’t grow flowers at scale on an apartment garden balcony and you often can’t rent your yard as a dog park when you don’t own your yard. So if you’ve been on the fence about the cost of buying a home consider that ownership doesn’t just give you financial security of fixed monthly housing payments, or the ability to change your physical surroundings to suite your style. Home ownership gives you agency to leverage the roof over your head, and the property it sits on into tangible potentially life changing income you could not otherwise realize as a renter.

If you’re reading this, and that excites you, and you want to connect with our team at Tiny Empire group please feel free to give us a call or shoot us an email.

Senate Bill 608: New Regulations Are Changing the Game for Landlords

The new state Rent Control Bill – Senate Bill 608 – has caused a flurry of confusion for landlords and those property owners considering renting out a house or unit. Add in the fact that the city of Portland already has its own Tenant Relocation Assistance Ordinance and suddenly there are a lot of new hurdles for landlords to navigate.

After taking classes, doing tons of research, wherein we had to find out more about this accident lawyer in Orlando, FL, and hearing what real estate attorneys have to say about Senate Bill 608, we’ve broken down what these new laws might mean for you. Portland landlords need to understand the requirements and restrictions of both state and city regulations, and how they overlap. Fair warning, in our experience even real estate attorneys disagree as to the application and effects of these new regulations on property ownership in our area!

 

How does Senate Bill 608 Affect Landlords Who Want to Sell?

Oregon Senate Bill 608 is often referred to as the “Rent Control Bill.” The intent of this bill is to prohibit landlords from terminating month-to-month tenancy without cause after 12 months of occupancy, and to put a limit on large increases in rents.

The big news is that property owners who want to sell a tenant occupied property, in which tenants have lived longer than a year, are no longer able to issue No Cause Eviction notices, unless they meet one of these exceptions:

  1. Owner intends to demolish the dwelling unit or convert the dwelling unit to a use other than residential use within a reasonable time;
  2. Owner intends to undertake repairs or renovations to the dwelling unit within a reasonable time, and at least one of these apply:
    1. The premises is unsafe or unfit for occupancy; or
    2. The dwelling unit will be unsafe or unfit for occupancy during the repairs or renovations.
  3. Owner intends for the owner or a member of the owner’s immediate family to occupy the dwelling unit as a primary residence and the owner does not own a comparable unit in the same building that is available for occupancy at the same time that the tenant receives notice to terminate the tenancy; or
  4. Owner has (A) accepted an offer to purchase the dwelling unit separately from any other dwelling unit from a person who intends in good faith to occupy the dwelling unit as the person’s primary residence; and B) Owner has provided this notice and written evidence of the offer to purchase the dwelling unit to Resident not more than 120 days after accepting the offer to purchase.

*Translation:  A landlord may no longer give a no cause 90-day notice to tenants (after one year of tenancy), then fix up the property once they vacate, in order to procure a higher sales price. A landlord may list the property for sale with tenants in place. Only after an offer has been accepted may she give the 90 day notice to vacate, and only for a buyer who plans to live in the property as a primary residence.

SB 608 also requires landlords to pay a relocation assistance of one month’s rent to tenants evicted for Qualifying Landlord Reasons (with some exceptions). The city of Portland, however, already has its own Relocation Assistance Ordinance and this is one of the major areas where  the two laws overlap.

 

Portland’s Tenant Relocation Assistance Ordinance

On March 7, 2018 the city of Portland made the Tenant Relocation Assistance Ordinance permanent. This ordinance mandates payments from the landlord to the tenant when either an End of Tenancy notice is served, or an increase notice of 10 percent or higher is served, and the tenant then elects to move.

The Portland City Council met earlier this year to address some of the issues created by SB 608. These fixes were adopted on March 13, 2019, and include:

  • Reiterating SB 608’s Qualifying Landlord Reason for issuing an End of Tenancy Notice after the first year of occupancy.
  • Removing a shortened 60-day termination timeline regarding federal mortgage financing for the sale of a property (SB 608 did not make that accommodation).
  • Clarifying several statements on how certain affordable housing may be exempted.
  • Limiting the total amount of relocation payment required by state and city laws.

In order to benefit from a reduced relocation payment, the landlord must pay the total relocation payment in full at the time the 90-day End of Tenancy notice is served. The city’s new language allows landlords to deduct the amount of the state relocation from the amount required by the city of Portland.

Portland Relocation Assistance is awarded as follows:

  • $2,900 – Studio or single room occupancy (SRO)
  • $3,300 – One bedroom dwelling unit
  • $4,200 – Two bedroom dwelling unit
  • $4,500 – Three bedroom or larger dwelling unit

Our take on these new regulations is that once the dust settles, professional landlords whose goal it is to rent out their properties long term, and who understand the benefit of long tenancies, will be less impacted by these regulations.

For those of you who are considering a short term rental period or want to have a large amount of flexibility in terms of when and how you sell or improve your property, our advice is to seek legal counsel before you make any decisions to rent out your property. Renting your primary residence for a few years while you make decisions regarding your next real estate steps has gotten a lot more complicated than it used to be.

We advise you to perform serious due diligence on this issue. Don’t hesitate to call us if you need resources to help you make decisions about renting your property!