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BRRRR Strategy Walkthrough — Real Numbers, Real Property, 2026 Edition

Full BRRRR strategy walkthrough with real 2026 numbers — $120k Cleveland buy, $35k rehab, $200k ARV, 75% LTV cash-out. Cash-on-cash math, mistakes, FAQ.
May 31, 2026 by
The Irola

You keep hearing about BRRRR. Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat. Sounds clean on a podcast. Looks ugly when your contractor ghosts you on day 14 and the appraiser comes in $22k under your projection.

This walkthrough is different. You are going to follow one deal — a real-style $120,000 single-family in the Cleveland MSA — from offer to cash-out refinance, with every line item, every fee, every spread sheet cell exposed. By the end you will know exactly what your money does, when, and whether the BRRRR strategy actually leaves you with infinite returns or a leveraged headache.

If you want the spreadsheet template that powers this walkthrough, grab the Irola BRRRR Calculator before you scroll further. The math is the entire game.

The BRRRR method real estate investors use is not a hack. It is a capital recycling loop. You inject cash to buy and fix a distressed property, you force appreciation through the rehab, you stabilize it with a tenant, and then you replace your cash with a long-term loan secured against the new, higher value.

When it works, you pull most or all of your initial capital back out. You still own the asset. You still collect rent. The cash you recovered funds deal number two. That is the engine.

According to the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, real estate equity remains the single largest non-financial asset on US household balance sheets, holding roughly 26% of total household assets in the latest 2025 release. The wealthiest decile leverages that asset class harder than any other — which is exactly what BRRRR teaches you to do at small scale.

Here is the loop in plain math. You buy at 70% of After Repair Value (ARV) minus rehab costs. You spend the rehab budget. You rent. You refinance at 75% LTV. The 5% delta — between the 70% you bought at and the 75% the bank lends you against — is the spread that funds your next deal.

If that spread is negative, you have not done BRRRR. You have done a rehab project that locked up cash. The whole walkthrough below is built around protecting that spread.

You are looking at a 1,180 square-foot, 3-bed, 1-bath single-family in a Cuyahoga County zip code with a Section 8 voucher cap of $1,920 for a 3-bedroom unit (per the HUD Fair Market Rents 2026 dataset). The home was built in 1953. Vinyl siding. Detached one-car garage. Original kitchen. One full bath that hasn't been touched since the Reagan administration.

Listing price: $135,000. Days on market: 87. The seller already cut once.

You run comps inside a half-mile radius. Three rehabbed 3/1s in similar square footage sold in the last 90 days at $198,000, $204,500, and $201,000. You set ARV at $200,000 — slightly below the median to keep the appraisal honest.

Now apply the classic BRRRR purchase formula:

> Max Allowable Offer = (ARV × 0.70) − Rehab − Closing − Holding

You estimate $35,000 rehab, $4,500 closing, $3,500 holding (we will detail all of this). That gives you:

> ($200,000 × 0.70) − $35,000 − $4,500 − $3,500 = $97,000 max

You offer $115,000. Seller counters $122,000. You settle at $120,000 — $2k above your "ideal" max. You accept the squeeze because the comps are tight and the rehab scope has zero structural surprises after your inspection. This is a real-world BRRRR walkthrough, not a fantasy.

You are not putting $120,000 of your own money on the closing table. Almost no BRRRR investor does. The whole point is leverage during the buy phase, then permanent financing on the back end.

You have three common funding routes for the acquisition:

| Funding source | LTV / LTC | Rate (April 2026) | Points | Best for | |---|---|---|---|---| | Hard money lender | 90% LTC + 100% rehab | 11.5% | 2 pts | Speed, distressed assets | | Private money (individual) | Negotiable | 8–10% | 0–1 pt | Trust-based, repeat deals | | HELOC on primary | Up to 85% CLTV | 9.25% (prime + 1.75) | $0 | Investors with home equity |

For this walkthrough, you go hard money — the most common route for a first or second BRRRR. The lender funds:

- 90% of purchase price = $108,000 - 100% of rehab = $35,000 - You bring $12,000 down + $4,500 closing + 2 points ($2,860) = $19,360 cash to close

The hard money note is interest-only at 11.5% for a 12-month term. Monthly carry on the funded balance grows as you draw on the rehab tranche, but average it conservatively across 5 months at the full $143,000 balance: $1,371/mo in interest.

Skim the Irola Real Estate Funding Playbook if you want the full lender-shopping checklist — there is no point chasing the wrong capital structure into a deal.

This is where new BRRRR investors hemorrhage money. The rehab is not cosmetic. It is value engineering. Every dollar you spend should either (a) increase ARV, (b) reduce vacancy risk, or (c) shrink your 10-year capex curve.

Here is the itemized scope of work for 1247 Maple, priced from a real Cleveland-area GC bid sheet:

| Line item | Scope | Materials | Labor | Total | |---|---|---|---|---| | Roof | Tear off + 30-year architectural shingle | $2,400 | $3,800 | $6,200 | | HVAC | Replace 25-yr-old furnace + add central AC | $4,100 | $1,900 | $6,000 | | Kitchen | Cabinets (RTA), butcher block, mid-tier appliances, LVT floor | $5,200 | $2,800 | $8,000 | | Bathroom | New tub surround, vanity, toilet, tile floor | $1,800 | $2,200 | $4,000 | | Electrical | 100A panel upgrade + GFCIs + 8 fixtures | $1,300 | $1,700 | $3,000 | | Plumbing | Repair main stack + replace water heater | $1,100 | $1,400 | $2,500 | | Paint (interior) | All walls, ceilings, trim — neutral grey | $600 | $1,400 | $2,000 | | Flooring (LVT) | 700 sqft luxury vinyl plank, $2.80/sqft installed | $1,200 | $760 | $1,960 | | Landscaping + curb | Mulch, trim, exterior paint touch-up | $300 | $440 | $740 | | Contingency | 5% buffer | — | — | $1,600 | | Total | | $18,000 | $16,400 | $36,000 |

You budgeted $35,000. You are $1,000 over before you swing a hammer. Welcome to BRRRR. This is normal — your contingency exists for exactly this. You absorb the gap because the scope is locked and your hard money lender funded the full $35,000 ceiling. The extra $1,000 comes from your reserves.

The rehab runs 45 days from close. That is aggressive but achievable on a non-structural cosmetic-plus-mechanicals job in Cleveland. Plan 60. Brandon Turner from BiggerPockets put it bluntly:

> "Every BRRRR deal I have ever done went over budget and over schedule. The investors who win plan for that ahead of time, not after the contractor calls them at 9pm." — Brandon Turner

Add a holding cost of $3,500 across 60 days: hard money interest ($2,742), utilities ($180), insurance ($420), property tax ($158).

Stabilization is the step lenders care about most when you go to refinance. They want a signed lease, ideally seasoned 30+ days, with a tenant who is paying.

Cleveland MSA market rent for a renovated 3/1 in your zip pulled from Realtor.com's rental data is sitting at $1,775–$1,925 in Q1 2026, with 3.4% YoY growth. The HUD voucher cap of $1,920 gives you a strong Section 8 ceiling. You list at $1,895, take applications, and end up with a mixed strategy:

- Section 8 voucher tenant: $1,850/mo with $1,560 from CMHA, $290 tenant portion. 24-month lease. - Backup market rate: $1,825/mo if the voucher fails inspection.

You go Section 8. The annual gross rent: $22,200. Vacancy reserve at 6% for Section 8 (lower than market) = $1,332. Effective gross income: $20,868.

Operating expenses, annualized, real numbers:

| Expense | Annual | Monthly | |---|---|---| | Property tax (Cuyahoga County) | $1,860 | $155 | | Insurance (DP-3 landlord policy) | $1,140 | $95 | | Property management (8% of collected rent) | $1,776 | $148 | | Repairs & maintenance (5% of gross) | $1,110 | $93 | | Capex reserve (5% of gross) | $1,110 | $93 | | Utilities (vacancy/common) | $240 | $20 | | Lawn care | $480 | $40 | | Total OpEx | $7,716 | $643 |

Net Operating Income (NOI) = $20,868 − $7,716 = $13,152/year.

If you want to pressure-test those expense ratios against your own market, the Irola Rental Underwriting Course walks through how to localize each line.

This is the BRRRR step that makes or breaks the loop. Everything before this was forced appreciation theater. The refinance is what monetizes it.

You apply to a portfolio lender 90 days post-rehab completion (the seasoning window most lenders require for cash-out on investment property in 2026). The appraiser walks the property. Your comps held — appraisal comes in at $201,000. You round down to use $200,000 ARV for clean math.

According to Freddie Mac's Primary Mortgage Market Survey, the 30-year fixed average for owner-occupied was 6.42% the week ending April 17, 2026. Investment property pricing typically runs 75–100 bps higher. Your DSCR loan quote: 7.25%, 30-year amortization, 75% LTV.

Here is the refinance math:

| Line | Amount | |---|---| | ARV / appraised value | $200,000 | | Max LTV (75%) | $150,000 | | Refinance closing costs (2.5%) | $3,750 | | Net loan proceeds | $146,250 | | Hard money payoff (purchase + rehab) | $143,000 | | Cash returned to you at close | $3,250 |

Wait. That looks bad. You injected $19,360 into the deal up front and only pulled $3,250 back at the refinance? That is not infinite returns. That is leaving $16,110 in the deal.

Yes. And that is the honest version of BRRRR in 2026 with current rates and a tight purchase price.

You did not hit the unicorn "all your money out" outcome. But here is what you actually did: you converted a $19,360 cash injection into $50,000 of equity ($200,000 ARV − $150,000 loan) and $13,152 in annual NOI. Now we calculate whether that math actually works.

The BRRRR cash on cash return is the metric that tells you whether to scale or stop.

Your new permanent loan: $150,000 at 7.25%, 30-year fixed. Monthly P&I: $1,023. Annual debt service: $12,276.

Annual cash flow:

| Line | Annual | |---|---| | NOI | $13,152 | | Debt service | $12,276 | | Pre-tax cash flow | $876 |

Your remaining cash in the deal: $19,360 (initial) − $3,250 (refi pull-out) + $1,000 (rehab overrun) = $17,110.

Five percent. After all that work. Sounds underwhelming until you remember three things:

1. You still own a $200,000 asset with $50,000 of equity — that's a 292% return on the $17,110 trapped in the deal, in equity alone. 2. The 30-year fixed loan amortizes — year-one principal paydown adds another $1,654 to your effective return, pushing total return north of 14.7%. 3. You can repeat in 6–9 months with the $3,250 you pulled out plus additional capital.

This is the actual answer to "is BRRRR worth it in 2026". It depends entirely on whether you optimize for cash flow, equity, or velocity. Most successful BRRRR investors optimize for velocity — number of deals per year — and accept thin first-year cash flow because the equity stack and amortization compound brutally over a decade.

David Greene, who literally wrote the book on this strategy, said it best:

> "BRRRR is not about making cash flow on day one. It is about how much real estate you can own with the same dollar over a ten-year window. If you measure it by month-one cash flow, you are using the wrong yardstick." — David Greene

The single most sensitive variable in your BRRRR walkthrough is the refinance LTV. Even a 5% swing changes the entire deal.

| Scenario | LTV | Loan amount | Cash returned | Cash left in | New monthly P&I | Cash-on-cash | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | Conservative | 70% | $140,000 | -$6,750 | $26,110 | $955 | 4.0% | | Standard | 75% | $150,000 | $3,250 | $17,110 | $1,023 | 5.1% | | Aggressive | 80% | $160,000 | $13,250 | $7,110 | $1,091 | 11.5% |

That 80% LTV row looks tempting. Pulling $13,250 back means you nearly recovered all your capital. But two problems: (a) most DSCR lenders cap investment property cash-out at 75% in 2026, (b) higher LTV crushes your DSCR ratio (loan service vs NOI) and may push you into a higher rate or a denial. The 75% column is the realistic target.

For most beginner BRRRR investors, plan for the 70% conservative row. If you get 75%, celebrate. If you get 80%, you found a unicorn lender or you under-rehabbed to keep the loan small.

Step back from monthly cash flow for a second. Look at the wealth math.

| Metric | Year 1 | Year 5 | Year 10 | |---|---|---|---| | Property value (3% annual appreciation) | $206,000 | $231,855 | $268,783 | | Loan balance (amortizing) | $148,346 | $140,232 | $127,890 | | Equity | $57,654 | $91,623 | $140,893 | | Cumulative cash flow (3% rent growth) | $876 | $5,580 | $14,210 | | Total return on $17,110 | 240% | 470% | 808% |

You are not getting rich on a 5.1% cash-on-cash today. You are getting rich on the eight-fold return on your trapped capital over ten years — and the ability to do this four to six times with the same recycled capital.

If you can do 3 BRRRRs per year for 5 years and hold them, you control 15 properties, $3M in real estate, and ~$300k in cash flow at maturity. The Irola Portfolio Scaling Course is built around exactly this compounding framework.

Every line of the walkthrough above is a place where BRRRR investors blow up. Here are the failures that show up in the BiggerPockets forums most often:

For a full breakdown of the BRRRR mistakes that come up in audited deal reviews, the Irola BRRRR Mistakes Ebook cataloged 47 specific failure modes from 200 investor case studies.

If you are choosing between strategies, here is the brutal comparison:

| Metric | Traditional Buy-and-Hold | BRRRR | Flip | |---|---|---|---| | Cash required to start | 25% down ($30k+) | 10–20% effective | 20–30% | | Capital recovery | None | 70–95% via refi | 100% via sale | | Monthly cash flow | Strong, immediate | Thin year 1, grows | Zero (one-time) | | Tax treatment | Best (depreciation, hold) | Best (same as B&H) | Worst (ordinary income) | | Velocity (deals/yr) | 1–2 | 2–4 | 4–8 | | Risk profile | Low | Medium-high | High |

BRRRR sits in the middle. It is the strategy that most efficiently converts time and capital into a long-term portfolio. Flipping makes you cash. BRRRR makes you wealth.

Read the longer breakdown in comparing BRRRR vs traditional rentals and why most flippers eventually become BRRRR investors.

A few things you need to know before you scale this loop.

This article is not tax advice. Read the IRS Publication 527 on residential rentals and pay a CPA. But understand: BRRRR investors who do not run depreciation strategy are leaving thousands per door on the table every April.

Be honest with yourself. BRRRR is failing in three specific scenarios this year:

If any of these describe your local market, pivot to one of the alternative strategies before you force a deal.

Many Irola readers invest from outside the US — diaspora investors building US rental portfolios remotely. The Cleveland MSA BRRRR is one of the cleanest setups for that profile because:

- Low entry price: $120k purchases are accessible - Strong rent-to-price ratio: 1.5%+ monthly rent ratios are still achievable - Section 8 stability: HUD pays the bulk, reducing tenant default risk for remote landlords - Title companies handle remote close: e-notary now legal in Ohio (effective 2024) - Dedicated property managers: dozens of Section 8-fluent PMs in Cleveland working with out-of-state owners

The hardest part is the rehab oversight. Solution: hire a project manager separate from your GC. The PM walks the site weekly, documents progress photographically, and verifies draws before you wire. Budget 5% of rehab for this layer of oversight when you are remote.

For the full diaspora-specific BRRRR roadmap including LLC formation, ITIN tax filing, and remote underwriting workflows, work through the Irola US Real Estate from Abroad guide.

You just walked a $120,000 Cleveland purchase from offer through a $150,000 cash-out refinance with $3,250 of capital returned, a 5.1% cash-on-cash, and $50,000 of equity created in roughly 9 months. That is the honest face of the BRRRR strategy in 2026 — not the Instagram version, not the worst-case version, the actual middle-of-the-distribution version.

The investors winning right now are the ones who understand that BRRRR is a velocity play built on accurate ARV, disciplined rehab budgeting, and conservative refi assumptions. Skip any of those three and the loop becomes a leverage trap.

Want the underwriting spreadsheet, the contractor bid template, the lender comparison tool, and the exact Cleveland MSA zip codes used in this walkthrough?

Drop your email on the Irola BRRRR Newsletter and the deal-of-the-week breakdown lands in your inbox every Tuesday. No upsells in the body. Just the math, the property, and what would have killed the deal.

Run the numbers. Walk the block. Buy the house.

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