How To Find The Best Suburbs To Invest In (Part 3/4)

Published: Nov. 28, 2018, 8 p.m.

b'ARVE Error: Mode: lazyload not available (ARVE Pro not active?), switching to normal mode\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n{"@context":"http:\\\\/\\\\/schema.org\\\\/","@id":"https:\\\\/\\\\/onproperty.com.au\\\\/how-to-find-the-best-suburbs-to-invest-in-part-3-4\\\\/#arve-youtube-_pphji5ubbe","type":"VideoObject","embedURL":"https:\\\\/\\\\/www.youtube-nocookie.com\\\\/embed\\\\/_pPHjI5ubbE?feature=oembed&iv_load_policy=3&modestbranding=1&rel=0&autohide=1&playsinline=0&autoplay=0"}\\n\\n\\n\\n\\n\\nWhen investing in property you want to invest in the best area possible to reduce your risk in a bad market as well as get epic returns in a good market.\\nBook a Free Strategy Session - https://onproperty.com.au/session/\\n\\n0:00 - Introduction\\n1:10 - Rules to follow to exclude bad areas and maximise your returns\\n2:10 - Metro markets outperform regional markets\\n2:45 - Houses completely outperform units\\n3:20 - Properties closer to the city centre perform better than properties further away from the city\\n5:48 - Why we aren\'t looking for "Hot Spots" but rather looking for solid long term growth\\n7:20 - Timing the market for maximum results\\n9:11 - Next steps once you\'ve chosen your market\\n10:42 - Comparing suburbs to each other to find the best investment opportunity\\n13:08 - This is one of the biggest decisions you will make, so don\'t rush it\\n14:29 - Maximising your chance for cash flow\\n14:58 - Special free offer if you want extra help\\n\\nResources Mentioned in this Video\\n\\nLocation Score - http://locationscore.com.au\\nTranscription:\\nWhen it comes to investing in property, you want to buy in the best area possible to both reduce your risk in a bad market as well as increase your chance of getting epic returns in a good market. So in this episode of this series, we want to talk about how to find those good quality markets and those good quality suburbs. Hey, I\'m Ryan from on-property, helping you achieve financial freedom. Today I\'m joined by buyers agent Ben Everingham from pumped on property. Welcome Ben. Thanks man. Happy to be here. And this series is all about first time investors and how you can reduce your risk, maximize your turn and achieve financial freedom. And we told you in the last video, if you haven\'t watched it already, I\'ll leave a link to that down below, but we talked about purchasing those foundational properties that are gonna go on to achieve financial freedom for you and with those foundational properties. We want them to be in good suburbs. So there\'s always gonna be that demand. If we need to sell that property in the future or because will be renting that property, we want that high rental demand there. We want the rent to go up over time as well. So that\'s why we\'re going to be looking at buying into high quality areas and how you can find those areas.\\n\\nYeah, so there\'s a number of rules that ways investors can follow based on looking at the history or the data. Now just alert. I\'m going to be like going hard into data on this. Sorry Ron. But you know, these rules have really simple and they make logical sense.\\n\\nI think. Let\'s just set me up when we\'re looking for high quality areas, what we\'re going to do is create a framework and we\'re going to set a bunch of rules in place that are basically going to exclude a lot of areas. So it\'s less about finding the one hotspot that you read in a magazine article or something like that. And it\'s about excluding all the areas that don\'t fit into your criteria. So this is what we\'ve found as the easiest and the best way to do it. And we think you\'ll have success as well. So ben is the data node here, so he\'s going to lay out some of these rules for you guys that you can follow if you want to reduce your risk and increase your chance. Chance,\\n\\npretend. Yeah, as always, like epic way to say what I was trying to say. So these Rosa simple. It\'s buying in metro markets which effectively means the big cities in Australia. If you look at the longterm data over the last 20 years,'