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How to start investing in real estate


In 2015, Sahil Mehta helped sell his first property in the Berkeley, Calif., area at the age of 18, earning a commission of around $2,000. It solidified his interest in pursuing real estate sales and investments, which has only grown in the ensuing years.

“It was such an incredible feeling, not because of the amount of money but the sense of accomplishment,” Mehta tells CNBC Make It.

Now, at just 25, Mehta co-owns five investment properties with his older brother, worth around $9.4 million. He also works full-time at Golden Gate Sotheby’s, helping manage and close sales. 

To save up for his first property, Mehta worked at Sotheby’s while still attending the University of California, Berkeley. In 2017, he and his brother, who is his business partner, bought their first house for $950,000. The brothers rent out four of the properties to college students and families, and operate one as an Airbnb. After mortgage payments and property taxes, they earn around $25,000 per month from rent, which they split evenly.

Mehta says he was lucky to get the job at Sotheby’s in college, which allowed him to save a healthy amount of money when he was still very young. This year, he’s on track to earn around $350,000 from his day job. He acknowledges that would-be investors need a lot of money to even get into the game, and that it is obviously easier to buy properties when you can split the cost with someone else, which not everyone can do.

He’s also learned some expensive lessons along the way. Mehta purchased a duplex in January 2020 and planned to flip it into a single-family home, but local housing ordinances prohibited that. He estimates he lost tens of thousands of dollars before renting out that property on Airbnb, and now makes sure to do his research before buying.

Mehta and his brother plan to add more properties to their portfolio in the years to come. They are also saving to buy their mom and dad a home nearby them in California. Mehta says it’s the least they can do for their parents, who immigrated to the U.S. from India and worked hard to provide a stable future for their children.

“There’s no proportional things that I can do for what they’ve done for us,” he says. “That being said, without conditions or anything, we will do what we can for them.”

Here are four tips from Mehta for those interested in real estate investing.

1. Pick a lane



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