We're in the midst of fixing up my dad's house for sale. It is sort of like flipping, so I'm obsessed with flipping DIY shows and blogs, etc.
Anyone here ever been a flipper? Would love to hear your stories!


It's official. I need new glasses. When I glanced at the thread title, I thought it said, "Ever flip a horse?"
No, I've never flipped a house OR a horse.![]()

But, have you ever tipped a cow?![]()




It depends on what part of Texas you're talking about. In our area there has been a glut of new houses so the older houses are harder to move. We also had a lot of foreclosures due to way too many people buying way too much house.I was actually watching House Hunters last night in HGTV, it was from some other area in TX, they said that they hadn't experienced the same housing crash and in fact it was at this time a sellers market, I was stunned. I didn't know those existed anymore. Good for Texas.
Things are a mess and they are nowhere near close to being over, we didn't even hit bottom yet.We're in the midst of fixing up my dad's house for sale. It is sort of like flipping, so I'm obsessed with flipping DIY shows and blogs, etc.
Anyone here ever been a flipper? Would love to hear your stories!



think about who is sponsoring the shows on house sales, the real estate industry. Once people stop expecting values to go up they stop buying, once they stop buying the real estate industry stops getting paid. They got us all into this mess in the first place by telling people it was ok to buy a $5000,000 home for $500 a month interest only,real estate people are the very last people to listen to right now.
PS I don't think the agents intended things to go this way, their education regarding finance is almost non-existant, they only knew enough to move houses. I blame the governments inability to protect and educate the public to be honest, none of this should have ever been allowed to happen. Once gas prices rose and relative incomes dropped everything came down like a house of cards when people couldn't absorb the price increases across the boardThings are a mess and they are nowhere near close to being over, we didn't even hit bottom yet.
In 2007 just before the market went south my family flipped our one and only house.
It was a unique situation because we were able to buy my great-uncle's house after he died. My family (parents & siblings) bought the house from his estate (ie other family members).
We paid $90,000 for a 950 square foot 2 bedroom 1 bath 1920's bungalow that was in awful condition but in a fantastic location (historic district).
We replaced petty much everything:
New kitchen cabinets, granite countertops, new appliances.
New paint (inside and out).
Refinished floors but replaced baseboards.
New bathroom tile & bath vanity
Added central HVAC
New water heater
New windows & doors
Rebuilt garage
converted screen porch into sunroom
New landscaping
I'm sure I'm forgetting some things...
We did about 80% of the work ourselves. We hired a landscaper, plumber and HVAC tech. We spent about $40,000 on all of the upgrades and after about 2 months on the market we sold it for $235,000. After splitting the profits with my parents & brothers, DH & I walked away with just about $20,000.
It was hard work and looking back we were extremely fortunate that it sold so fast. I felt kinda bad for the woman who bought it bc the house is now back on the market bank owned for $180,000. Here's a link of the current listing.
Make sure your homeowners insurance knows it's a vacant house, I remember a thread about it not being covered when a house burnt down.

think about who is sponsoring the shows on house sales, the real estate industry. Once people stop expecting values to go up they stop buying, once they stop buying the real estate industry stops getting paid. They got us all into this mess in the first place by telling people it was ok to buy a $5000,000 home for $500 a month interest only,real estate people are the very last people to listen to right now.
PS I don't think the agents intended things to go this way, their education regarding finance is almost non-existant, they only knew enough to move houses. I blame the governments inability to protect and educate the public to be honest, none of this should have ever been allowed to happen. Once gas prices rose and relative incomes dropped everything came down like a house of cards when people couldn't absorb the price increases across the boardThings are a mess and they are nowhere near close to being over, we didn't even hit bottom yet.