BRRRR strategy in New Jersey: refi timing, ARV expectations, and the math
BRRRR (buy-rehab-rent-refinance-repeat) in New Jersey - realistic ARV ranges in Camden and other metros, refi appraisal timing, what 75% LTV cash-out looks like, and where deals actually pencil.
BRRRR in New Jersey: what to actually expect
BRRRR works when the spread between your all-in cost and the after-rehab value (ARV) is wide enough that a 75% LTV cash-out refi lets you pull most or all of your initial cash back out. That spread depends entirely on the local market.
In Camden, distressed SFRs are still tradeable in the $140k-$168k range. After a $25-40k rehab in a B-class neighborhood, ARVs in the $189,000 ballpark are realistic on Camden-area comps. 75% LTV refi pulls out about $141,750 in cash - which often covers purchase + most of the rehab, leaving you with positive cash flow on a near-zero cash investment.
That's the ideal. Here's what to watch for in New Jersey:
ARV reality check
New Jersey's Newark market has appreciation-driven pricing - the gap between distressed-purchase and stabilized-ARV has compressed. BRRRR still works, but you need to be sharper on the rehab scope and not over-improve.
Standard practice: get a broker's price opinion (BPO) before you close on the purchase, comping to the rehabbed standard. If 2 BPOs don't show your target ARV, walk.
Refi timing in New Jersey
Most BRRRR-friendly lenders in New Jersey require either:
- 6 months seasoning from purchase date (most common), or
- No seasoning but you only get back to your purchase + documented rehab cost (the "delayed financing exception").
For the no-seasoning route to be worth it, the new appraised value has to support the cash-out. Some New Jersey lenders specifically work BRRRR investors - search for "DSCR + cash-out refi New Jersey" and you'll find 3-5 active brokers.
Property tax recalc on the refi: New Jersey's 2.21% effective rate applies to the new assessed value after the refi triggers a reassessment in some counties. Budget for taxes to step up if your ARV is materially above your purchase.
Rehab scope that actually pencils
In Camden (deep value, high risk, gentrification thesis), rehab dollar-for-dollar return looks roughly like:
- Kitchen/bath refresh (cabinets, fixtures, paint, LVP): $8-15k, returns roughly 1.5x in ARV
- Full kitchen + bath gut: $25-40k, returns roughly 1.3x in ARV
- Mechanical replacement (HVAC, roof, plumbing): cost-only, no ARV uplift but de-risks the refi
- Add a bedroom (legal conversion): $5-15k, often 1.8-2x in ARV if 2BR -> 3BR
Be careful about partial rentals during rehab - New Jersey's tenant protections kick in even on month-to-month, and removing a tenant for the next phase of rehab can be slow.
Numbers that signal a real BRRRR deal here
Run your scenario through the BRRRR calculator. Targets for a good New Jersey BRRRR:
- All-in cost (purchase + rehab + closing + carrying): <= 70% of ARV. Below 75% and the deal is dead at refi.
- Cash recovered at refi: 80-100% of total cash invested. The whole point.
- Post-refi cash flow: $150-300/mo per door minimum. Anything less and you've created a leveraged loss.
- Post-refi DSCR: 1.2+ for the refi to underwrite cleanly.
Highest property tax in the US. Many NJ cities have rent control - check before buying. The Hoboken/Jersey City corridor is appreciation-only.
The honest take
New Jersey is one of the better BRRRR states because cheaper entry prices + landlord-friendly law + active distressed inventory still exists. The bottleneck is finding the deals - MLS is picked over, off-market or wholesaler-sourced is where the spreads live.