If you’ve ever watched HGTV for more than 20 minutes, you’ve probably thought: “I could do that. Buy a house, renovate it, sell it for $100k more, repeat.” And you’re not wrong — house flipping can be incredibly profitable. But TV skips over the parts that will absolutely destroy your margins if you’re not careful.

Here’s the real story on flipping houses.

The Golden Rule of Flipping: The 70% Rule

Before you make an offer on any flip, use the 70% rule to quickly gauge if it’s worth pursuing:

Maximum Purchase Price = (After Repair Value x 70%) – Renovation Costs

Example: A home will be worth $300,000 fixed up (the ARV). Renovations will cost $40,000.
($300,000 x 0.70) – $40,000 = $210,000 – $40,000 = $170,000 maximum offer

If the seller wants $200,000, walk away. The numbers don’t work.

The True Costs of a Flip (The Parts TV Ignores)

Here’s everything that eats your profit that most beginners forget to account for:

Add it all up honestly. Many “profitable” flips on paper turn into breakevens or losses when you account for every cost.

Finding Flip Properties: Where to Look

Managing Your Flip: Scope of Work and Contractor Selection

Your renovation budget will make or break the flip. Before closing:

  1. Walk the property with a contractor and get a detailed written estimate
  2. Get at least 3 bids for major work
  3. Write a specific scope of work — not “redo kitchen” but “replace cabinets, install quartz countertops, replace appliances, repaint”
  4. Never pay more than 30–40% upfront to any contractor
  5. Tie payments to completed milestones, not dates

The Most Common Flip Mistakes

The Bottom Line

House flipping is a real business that requires capital, knowledge, and discipline. When done right, a single flip can net $30,000–$100,000+ in profit. When done wrong, it can wipe out your savings. Do your numbers, work with experienced contractors, and never fall in love with a deal that doesn’t work on paper.

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