Rental Property Maintenance With Your Kids Solves Two Problems

If you're a real estate investor with children, you may face two significant challenges.

The first challenge is holding onto your rental property for as long as possible. You understand that the longer you own real estate and stocks, the more likely you are to build wealth. However, as you grow older and wealthier, your tolerance for managing rental properties may decrease.

The second challenge builds on the first. As your wealth increases, so does the risk of raising spoiled and entitled children who aren't motivated to work hard for their money. Raising able-bodied children who fail to launch into adulthood is one of the greatest disservices parents can do to them. By overprotecting them, you deprive them of independence, the opportunity to find love, and the satisfaction of achieving their own goals.

One of the best way to address both challenges is by involving your children in rental property maintenance.

The Value of Owning Rental Property Is Even Greater with Children

Owning rental property was a key factor in my being able to retire early in 2012.

The combination of rising rents and increasing property values over time is a powerful force for building wealth. No longer are you at the mercy of inflation; instead, you’re making inflation work for you. As you improve your skills in remodeling, expansion, negotiation, and marketing, you might further enhance the value of your real estate investments.

Since becoming a father in 2017, I've realized an additional value of owning rental property: using it as a tool to teach my children about property maintenance. Once I recognized the educational potential of rental property, the decision to hold onto it rather than sell became easier.

Rental Property as an Educational Tool

The pandemic changed the way I thought about education. Four months after our son started preschool, we pulled him out when the lockdowns began in March 2020. With a four-month-old baby at home and both my wife and I without day jobs, we felt that homeschooling our son was the best option.

If he or our baby had become severely ill because we didn’t take the opportunity to care for them, we would have felt terrible as dual no-job parents. So, we made the rational decision to educate our son ourselves. The days were long, but we made the best of a challenging situation.

Eighteen months later, in the fall of 2022, we enrolled him back in regular school. After several months, I realized that homeschooling is about three times more efficient at imparting knowledge than traditional schooling. This makes sense given the daily one-on-one attention for hours from each parent.

Recognizing the significant difference in educational progress, we decided to provide supplemental education whenever possible. We figured that if he has the capability to learn more, why not teach him more?

This is where rental property maintenance comes into play as it involves so many parts of becoming an adult.

Specific Benefits Of Rental Property Maintenance Work

Instead of treating rental property maintenance as a chore, we decided to make it part of our children's educational curriculum. Here are the benefits of teaching your children rental property maintenance:

  • Self-Sufficiency: They learn to be more self-sufficient as adults by acquiring the skills to fix various things around the house.
  • Employment Skills: Learning basic skills in painting, plumbing, construction, electrical work, and landscaping makes them more employable in these trades. They might even start businesses in these fields.
  • Property Care: It teaches them that everything degrades over time and must be maintained.
  • Business Skills: They learn how to acquire good tenants, provide an excellent product, treat people well, and negotiate effectively.
  • Appreciation for Hard Work: They gain a better appreciation for the value of hard work. You don't want to miss financial opportunities due to a lack of hard work.
  • Role Modeling: Seeing their parents get their hands dirty with maintenance work helps eliminate any sense of entitlement.
  • Investment Motivation: It encourages them to invest in real estate and generate semi-passive income for their future.
  • Purpose and Satisfaction: They experience the sense of purpose and satisfaction that comes after completing a job well done.
  • Understanding the Supply Chain: It teaches them about where to purchase materials and how cost affects net rental income.

Using rental properties as an educational tool is another advantage of owning real estate over stocks. Kids might not appreciate a gifted stock portfolio, where no effort was needed. But with real estate, they can engage with a tangible asset that offers countless opportunities to work.

The Key To Eliminating Entitlement In Our Children

Wealth usually increases with age, but the problem with growing wealthier is that you can often become lazier. With more money, it’s easy to pay others to do everything for you—clean the house, mow the lawn, wash the car, and so on. That's logical given you're being efficient with your time. However, if our children only see the fruits of our labor, and not the labor, this could be problematic.

Parents might end up buying their kids $600 Woom bikes instead of a rusty hand-me-down, just because their friends have them. For the next family vacation, parents might take them on a $10,000-a-week Disney Cruise, where there are all-you-can-eat buffets and endless activities. After 18 years of living such a comfortable life, it’s hard for them not to develop an entitlement mentality!

To course-correct and help eliminate this mentality, you, as the parent, must also be willing to do the work. It doesn’t matter if you’re a CEO with a $10 million investment portfolio generating $400,000 a year in passive income. At home, get on your hands and knees and wipe the jam stains off the kitchen floor!

By seeing you in action, your children will be more motivated to put in the work as well. There’s no way they can object to your request when they see you working alongside them.

Educating through action is far more effective than educating through instruction.

Rental Property Turnover Provides an Opportunity for Maintenance Work

In July 2024, two years and one month after my tenants moved in, they gave me their 31-day notice. For the most part, they were good tenants who paid on time electronically and took care of the house.

They gave their notice a couple of days before heading to Paris for a month and allowed me to show the property while they were away. Fortunately, I was able to secure another tenant during this period. The new tenants paid the deposit and the first month’s rent, starting on August 1, 2024.

On August 1, 2024, I met with their relocation specialist for the walk-through. My new tenants were relocating from overseas to attend a nearby school.

The relocation specialist spent two hours inspecting my property, and to be honest, it felt extreme. She placed blue tape everywhere there were imperfections. However, her thoroughness taught me to be more meticulous during future pre-move-in and post-move-out walkthroughs.

Doing Maintenance Work With My Kids Over The Next Two Weeks

Due to all the blue tape around the rental property, I was able to easily identify and fix various issues. Some of the items had been bothering me for a while, including chipped countertops caused by previous tenants.

Here’s a list of tasks my kids and I completed before our new tenants moved in on August 14, 2024:

  • Epoxied and sanded chips and cracks in the kitchen counter (3 spots) and one in the laundry room counter.
  • Touched up the hand railing with matching oil paint on the stairs, both upstairs and downstairs.
  • Touched up some of the wall trim between the dining and living rooms.
  • Touched up the trim and fireplace in the living room.
  • Touched up the main bedroom wall where there were some scrapes from the furniture.
  • Touched up the bookshelf in the top-floor corner office, as well as any light spots.
  • Touched up the corner of the flower bed at the top floor near the stairs.
  • Tightened and caulked the loose bathroom toilet paper holders on the main floor and top floor.
  • Tightened and caulked the loose tub faucet in the upstairs bathroom.Touched up the front gate and entryway wall.
  • Installed a missing window crank in the main floor bedroom nearest the bathroom.
  • Removed carpet stains from the stairwell and main floor that were missed by the move-out cleaners.
  • Tightened the two loose shower handles on the sliding doors in the main bathroom on both the top floor and main level.
  • Watered the front and side yards and finished trimming the plants.
  • Landscaped the side yard by installing weed blockers, covering the ground with black mulch, removing a dead small tree, and planting three succulents.
  • Enclosed the backyard with a new fence at the very bottom.
  • Fixed the hinges on the side wooden fence door and installed a new wood plank to secure the loose wood panels.
  • Replaced an old exterior pipe, connected it to the vertical roof drain, added a filter, and rootered the pipe to ensure proper drainage during the next rainstorm.
Rental property maintenance - watering tree
  • Watered the young magnolia trees outside to ensure proper rooting.
  • Changed the main furnace filter and left three additional filters in the garage.
  • Replaced the garage door spring and two side cables that broke in the first week of August 2024.
  • Sealed and painted the side of the house electrical junction box using tape, as a hexagonal case had been installed instead of a circular one, to prevent water from entering.
  • Touched up and painted the exterior back wall and side wall of the house.
  • Filled a hole in the living room with wood filler and sanded it.
  • Cut a loose cable protruding from the living room floor trim, spackled the hole, sanded it, and painted the trim.
  • Added a new sink drain filter for the main floor bathroom sink.
  • Poored industrial Draino down the sinks of the top floor sinks.

Holy moly! That was a lot of maintenance work. In the past, before I had kids or thought about using my rental property as an educational tool, I would have been annoyed by all this work.

However, almost every day after camp, I'd pick up the kids and take them to the empty rental property to get them involved. These activities also provided an extra 1.5 hours of childcare help for my wife. The more teachable moments for our children to learn, the better.

To complete everything on the list felt incredibly satisfying. So we regularly went to the mall to get a treat afterward.

10 Years Of “Rental Property Camp” To Create Appreciation And Knowledge

I started involving my children in maintaining rental properties in 2023, when they helped landscape the front yard of a rental property at three and six years old.

My hope is that by continuing to involve them in rental property maintenance every summer or whenever there is turnover, they will gain the knowledge and skills needed to maintain these properties themselves. After all, they might one day inherit these properties—if they show appreciation.

Building a work foundation early should spur them to work in high school and college. In turn, this should lead to tax-efficient Roth IRA contributions to help build upon their financial future. We shall see.

The five biggest self-inflicted impediments to financial success are:

  • Laziness: Some able-bodied people work less than 40 hours a week and then wonder why they can't get ahead.
  • Entitlement: Some adults who attended private schools their entire lives choose to study a luxury major in college for $100,000 a year and then complain about low pay.
  • Pride: Some people who grew up wealthy are unwilling to work minimum wage service jobs to make ends meet.
  • Ignorance: Some people do not understand how competitive the world is because they've grown up sheltered. The shock of having to do everything themselves as adults leads them to rely on the Bank of Mom & Dad to support them.
  • Courage: Some people are too afraid to take investment or career risks. As a result, they end up with average wealth.

By encouraging your children to do rental property maintenance work with you, you may significantly reduce these four impediments, helping them become independent.

More Peace Of Mind As A Parent

Additionally, there’s a psychological benefit for you, the parent, in teaching your children to be appreciative and hard-working. More peace of mind.

Instead of raising kids who shoplift, break into cars, deal drugs, and mug people or worse, you raise kids who are willing to contribute to society. That means a lot, especially if you're a full-time parent for 18 years.

You can rest easier knowing that once they’re adults, your kids will be able to better navigate life on their own, allowing you to enjoy the remaining years of your life with more serenity.

I say this type of peace of mind is worth a lot in exchange for painting some walls with your kids don't you think?

Reader Questions And Suggestions

Do you do any rental property maintenance work with your kids? If not, what are some other things you do with your children to help them build work ethic and appreciation for money? As you get older and wealthier, what are some other strategies you use to help you hold onto your rental properties for longer?

If you can't afford to buy a rental property, but want to teach your children about real estate investing, check out Fundrise. Fundrise manages almost $3 billion for over 380,000 investors, primarily in the Sunbelt region where valuations are lower and yields tend to be higher. You can easily dollar-cost average into Fundrise due to its low minimum investment of $10.

Financial Samurai Fundrise investment amount and dashboard

I've personally invested over $300,000 in Fundrise to earn more passive real estate income and diversify into artificial intelligence. The older and wealthier you get, the less you'll like volatility. Fundrise is a long-time sponsor of Financial Samurai.

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pat
pat
5 months ago

another great article on RE. All our kids had RE portfolios with passive income & by the time they graduated they did not have student loans. Our youngest graduated & decided on a live-in apartment building and she worked hard to help rehab it. The original owner had 7 kids & everytime one was of age they would just add another apartment somewhere in or on the old fram house. Then 2 years after possession the Bldg Inspector hit us with the need for a fire sprinkler system throughout the entire 60’s era 6,500 sqft farm house, that had technically been illegally retrofitted with the 7 apartments.
I was able to complete some courses & got the permits to design & install the entire system. It took us 18months & my daughter became an expert on Pex runs, sprinkler head configurations & installs. With the required 1st responder alarm system the entire cost of materials ran about $4,200, along with weekly fresh egg bribes to the Bldg Inspector. Another investor friend had to retrofit his triplex in another less accomodating township & had to use a contractor & it ran $30k.

Todd
Todd
5 months ago

We’ve owned a rental property since 2006. For all of our 5 kids, that was their first job. We also employed our kids over the years for the janitorial service at our IT company’s office which allowed them to save and invest several thousand dollars each over the years. We paid them about $20/hr which was about half the cost of a janitorial service (although we had to take them to work once a week… lol)

Jesus Valencia
Jesus Valencia
5 months ago

Sam, great article. Agree. This is exactly what I have been doing with my 20 year old son the last 4 years or so. In addition to maintenance work he also helps me with the accounting of our duplex. Keep up the great work, love reading stuff and listening to your podcast.

Anon
Anon
6 months ago

I wholeheartedly agree, and I only wish my parents had done this for me. As a landlord, I am more at the mercy of contractors for most of the tasks you listed above. I usually know I’m getting overbilled, but it’s not significant, and I don’t have time to shop around more. I’m still working a full-time job, so I’m not too hard on myself, but I wish I knew how to do more of the property maintenance and could teach my kids. I make them pull weeds, do other landscaping tasks, and shovel snow, and my oldest boy now does showings with me.

Viktor
Viktor
6 months ago

That’s a great turnover checklist!

Jamie
Jamie
6 months ago

Love that you get your kids involved with fixing things and doing maintenance on homes. I learned a lot of handyman type skills from my pops growing up. They came in super useful as an adult. I feel like amongst my friends those who can fix and do repairs largely learned as kids. And the adults who are clueless and unwilling to learn had zero exposure growing up. So way to go starting your kids early!

Jarod
Jarod
6 months ago

You can also hire your kids to do this work. Put their earnings in a Roth. One day, as socialists take over the Democrats and our country, everyone is going to need way more money because of inflation, food shortages, etc. Get them started early so that they will be in a better position to take care of themselves, but maybe help others as well.

Longtime lurker
Longtime lurker
5 months ago

I thought the earned income only applied past a certain threshold, like $400 or $600?

Longtime Lurker
Longtime Lurker
5 months ago

I had researched this before I funded my kids account but now I can’t find exactly the tax codes and whatnot. Quick google has a Fidelity article (same concept as Roth for adults) but one other article from Journal of Accountancy touches on what I recall. The latter touches on earned income and what is needed to file a tax return (looks like $400 is the threshold if you don’t have a w2 – ie babysitting). So for me I funded up to $400 for my kid, below the threshold and for various jobs they did where they earned money but didn’t get a w2. I waited until the kid was 4/5 and under $400 seemed reasonable for unreported income for a minor.

CMAC
CMAC
6 months ago

Woom bike for $600? The one I bought for my daughter Xmas ‘23 was $1000! But it was worth it if you really want your kids to max enjoy biking. Woom bikes are so much lighter than lower quality kids bikes which helps them pedal faster and much further before their little skinny legs burn out and they start complaining. I routinely take my 9 and 7 year old on 14 mile gravel rides, which was not possible when they had lower quality and very heavy bikes.

steve Toth
steve Toth
6 months ago

Sam,
I have No Kids which has allowed me to acquire 17 rental properties and have them entirely Paid For ! Net worth exceeding 5m. Now, I am able to hire people to do the maintenance while I retire in style. Your systems and posts worked for me, and now i am following the book Die With Zero, and having a ball doing it!
Thanks for all you do

Steve In Tidewater Va

Jason
Jason
6 months ago

Great post Sam, my wife and I didn’t realize it until we bought our first home but both of us grew up working very in depth on our parent’s rental properties both upgrading, maintenance and handling tenants. We own a few rental properties now and have been grateful just about everyday for the skills we received at an early age that no book on managing rentals has ever given me (I still like reading them though). We may or may not have kids but if we do I guarantee you we are getting our hands on some yard work, plumbing and painting because like you said the lessons are invaluable!