How to Become a Landlord: Complete Beginner's Guide

Everything you need to know about becoming a landlord โ€” from buying your first rental property to finding great tenants and building long-term wealth.

Becoming a landlord is one of the most reliable paths to building wealth in America. Over 10 million individuals own rental property in the US, and real estate has created more millionaires than any other asset class. But getting started can feel overwhelming.

This guide walks you through every step โ€” from deciding if landlording is right for you, to buying your first property, finding tenants, and managing your investment like a pro.

Is Being a Landlord Right for You?

Before diving in, be honest about whether landlording fits your personality and financial situation:

You'll Thrive as a Landlord If You:

Landlording Might Not Be For You If:

๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip: You don't have to manage properties yourself. Many landlords hire property management companies to handle day-to-day operations, making it a truly passive investment.

10 Steps to Becoming a Landlord

1 Get Your Finances in Order

Before looking at properties, make sure you have:

Example: For a $200,000 property, you'd need $40-50K down payment plus $7-10K in reserves.

2 Learn Your Local Landlord-Tenant Laws

Every state (and many cities) have specific laws governing:

Ignorance of the law isn't a defense. Spend a few hours reading your state's landlord-tenant statutes โ€” it will save you thousands in legal fees later.

3 Choose Your Market and Property Type

Decide where and what you want to invest in:

Not sure which market to invest in? Check our guide to the best cities to buy rental property.

4 Analyze Deals Like a Pro

Never buy a property based on gut feeling. Run the numbers on every deal:

Use our free rental property ROI calculator and cap rate calculator to run the numbers.

5 Secure Financing

Common financing options for first-time landlords:

Loan TypeDown PaymentBest For
Conventional20-25%Standard investment property
FHA (2-4 units)3.5%House hacking โ€” live in one unit
VA Loan0%Veterans โ€” up to 4 units
DSCR Loan20-25%Qualify based on property income, not yours
Portfolio LoanVariesLocal banks, more flexible terms

6 Buy Your First Property

Work with a real estate agent who specializes in investment properties. Key tips:

7 Prepare the Property

Before listing for rent:

8 Set the Right Rent Price

Pricing your rental correctly is critical. Too high = vacancies. Too low = leaving money on the table.

Read our complete property management pricing guide for detailed strategies.

9 Find and Screen Tenants

Your tenant quality determines 80% of your landlording experience. Never rush this step.

Detailed screening process: How to Screen Tenants

10 Manage Your Property (or Hire a PM)

Day-to-day landlord responsibilities include:

If you don't want to self-manage, hiring a property manager typically costs 8-12% of monthly rent. Learn more: What do property managers charge?

Get Our Free 47-Point Property Management Checklist

Everything you need to manage your rental properties like a pro โ€” from tenant screening to maintenance schedules.

Download Free Checklist โ†’

Common First-Time Landlord Mistakes

  1. Not screening tenants thoroughly. One bad tenant can cost you $5,000-$20,000 in damages, lost rent, and eviction costs.
  2. Underestimating expenses. Budget 40-50% of gross rent for expenses (mortgage, taxes, insurance, repairs, vacancy, management).
  3. Skipping landlord insurance. Homeowner's insurance doesn't cover rental properties. Get proper coverage.
  4. Not having a written lease. A month-to-month verbal agreement is a lawsuit waiting to happen. Use a solid lease agreement template.
  5. Being too friendly. Be professional and consistent. Bending rules for one tenant creates problems with all of them.
  6. Ignoring tax benefits. Rental property offers massive tax advantages โ€” learn all the deductions.

Tax Benefits of Being a Landlord

One of the biggest perks of being a landlord is the tax treatment. You can deduct:

These deductions often mean your rental income is tax-free on paper, even while generating positive cash flow. Read our full tax deductions guide.

How Much Can You Make as a Landlord?

Returns vary by market, but here's a realistic example:

ItemMonthlyAnnual
Gross Rent$1,500$18,000
Mortgage (P&I)-$800-$9,600
Property Tax-$200-$2,400
Insurance-$100-$1,200
Maintenance (10%)-$150-$1,800
Vacancy (5%)-$75-$900
Net Cash Flow$175$2,100

On $50K invested (down payment + closing costs), that's a 4.2% cash-on-cash return โ€” plus appreciation, plus equity paydown, plus tax benefits. Total return often exceeds 15-20% annually when you factor everything in.

Self-Managing vs. Hiring a Property Manager

FactorSelf-ManagingProperty Manager
CostFree (your time)8-12% of rent
Time commitment5-10 hrs/month per propertyMinimal
Best for1-3 local properties4+ properties or out-of-state
Tenant issuesYou handle everythingPM handles it
ScalabilityLimitedHighly scalable

Most landlords self-manage until they hit 3-5 properties, then switch to professional management. Learn more about property management fees to decide what's right for you.

Ready to Scale Beyond Your First Property?

Our Property Management Growth Playbook shows you how to go from 1 door to 100+ โ€” with proven systems, KPIs, and growth strategies.

Get the Growth Playbook โ†’

FAQ

Do I need a license to be a landlord?

In most states, no license is required to rent out your own property. However, some cities require a rental license or business permit. Check your local regulations. If you manage properties for others, you may need a property management license.

How much money do I need to start?

Minimum $30-50K for a conventional investment property in affordable markets. You can start with as little as $10-15K if you house hack a duplex with an FHA loan.

What's the biggest risk of being a landlord?

Bad tenants (property damage, non-payment) and unexpected major repairs (roof, HVAC, foundation). Both risks are manageable with proper screening and cash reserves.

Should I form an LLC for my rental property?

Most experienced landlords recommend forming an LLC for liability protection once you have 1-2 properties. It separates your personal assets from your rental business. Learn more in our rental property LLC guide.