House flipping in Georgia: 70% rule, holding costs, and what kills deals
Fix-and-flip math for Georgia - realistic ARV ranges, the 70% rule applied to local comps, holding cost reality including Georgia's 0.83% property tax, and when to walk away.
Flipping in Georgia: the 70% rule applied here
The 70% rule says your maximum allowable offer (MAO) is 70% of ARV minus rehab. It's a smoke test, not a precise formula, but it works as a quick filter.
In Atlanta, where ARVs typically sit in the $310k-$420k range, that math runs like this:
- ARV: $420,000 (high end of comps)
- 70% of ARV: $294,000
- Less $30k typical rehab: MAO = ~$264,000
If you can't buy under that, the math doesn't work. Use the fix-and-flip calculator for your specific deal.
What Georgia flippers actually deal with
Property taxes during holding: 0.83% statewide average. On a $310,000 purchase held for 6 months, that's $1,287 in taxes alone - not the largest line item but rarely budgeted by new flippers.
Permit + inspection cycles: varies by municipality but generally 2-6 weeks for typical scope (kitchen/bath, HVAC, electrical updates). Pulling permits matters - unpermitted work tanks ARV when the buyer's inspector finds it.
Holding costs to budget:
- Mortgage/hard money interest: 10-12% APR on hard money is standard now. On $310,000 that's $2,842-3,100/mo
- Insurance (vacant + builder's risk): $150-300/mo
- Utilities + lawn care: $200-400/mo
- Total: figure $1,200-1,800/mo holding cost on a typical Atlanta flip
A 6-month flip = $7-11k just in carry. That comes out of your spread.
What kills Georgia flips
GA's eviction speed is part of the appeal. Section 8 program is well-run in many GA metros - good for stable rents if you can stomach inspections.
The common Georgia-specific deal-killers:
- Underestimating insurance during the rehab period. Builder's risk policies are usually findable but quote each one - underwriting standards have tightened.
- Comping to the wrong street. Atlanta's neighborhoods can flip from B-class to C-class across a 4-block stretch. Use comps within 0.5 miles and don't trust auto-valuation models on transitional blocks.
- Rehab scope creep. Lock the scope before close, get fixed-bid contracts where possible. Cost overruns of 20-30% are common and they eat the spread fast.
The actual go/no-go targets
For a flip in Georgia to actually work:
- Profit margin: $25-40k minimum on a $200-350k ARV flip. Below $25k and one bad week of carry kills it.
- Annualized ROI: 25%+ on cash-in. Lower than that and you're better off in a buy-and-hold.
- Days on market estimate: <90 from listing. Atlanta has slower DOM than it did in 2021-22; price aggressively to move.
- Exit price as % of comps: 95-100% of the top comp, NOT the average. Don't expect to be the #1 comp on the street.
One advantage of flipping in Georgia - if you change your mind and decide to hold + rent, the landlord-friendly law gives you a cleaner exit path on a problem tenant later.
When Georgia is + isn't the right state for flipping
Georgia's lower-priced metros (Augusta) still have flip-friendly margins because the absolute dollar spread on a $170,000 purchase + rehab is meaningful relative to the carry costs.
Run your specific deal through the fix-and-flip calculator - holding cost reality and the 70% rule sanity check will tell you in 2 minutes whether to drive out for the walk-through or not.