How I Turned a Losing Flip Into a Long-Term Win with Cash Flow, Equity & Bonus Depreciation
- marketing06276
- Jul 16
- 2 min read
I bought a property in Surprise, AZ with one goal in mind: flip it.

We underwrote it with a conservative ARV of $450K, even though several comps suggested we could go higher. I was all-in for $370K after closing and reno — and fully expected to be out within a couple of months with a solid profit.
Then the market shifted.
Inventory in the neighborhood shot up almost overnight. Multiple properties hit the market at the same time and started slashing prices just to get showings. Our conservative $450K ARV? It dropped to $430K real quick.
At that point, I had a decision to make:
Take a haircut and sell for less than expected, eating holding costs and killing my margin
Or pivot and turn this flip into a long-term asset
So I Shifted the Strategy
Here’s what I did:
Held the property instead of selling into a declining market
Put a renter in place at $2,400/month
Owned the property free and clear, so I immediately started cash flowing
Ran a cost segregation study and took advantage of the 100% bonus depreciation just reinstated by the Big Beautiful Bill — generating a $75K+ year-one tax write-off
That’s cash flow + equity + tax savings all from a deal that was headed in the wrong direction.
Then I Took It a Step Further
Since I own the property outright, I’m now pulling a Line of Credit for 70% of the appraised value — about $300K at 7% annual interest.
I’ll lend that capital inside of 42 Solutions at 12% plus 1 point, annualizing to a 13.5% return.
That gives me a 6.5% net spread on borrowed capital, backed by an asset that still cash flows and appreciates.
Real Estate Is About Strategy, Not Speed
I share this because not every deal goes as planned.
What matters is how you pivot when the market doesn’t cooperate.
This was supposed to be a flip.
Now it’s a tax-advantaged, cash-flowing asset with a built-in capital engine.
And honestly?
I might hold this one forever.
— DK

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