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Money Tree Investing

Bedroom Real Estate: How This Unique Rental Strategy Earns $50,000 a Month

Money Tree Investing

Money Tree Investing Podcast

Stockmarket, Valuestocks, Investing, Finance, Passiveincome, Wealth, Business, Personalfinance

4.6658 Ratings

🗓️ 4 July 2025

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ryan Chaw shares his bedroom real estate rental property strategy. As a pharmacist-turned-real estate investor Ryan shares how he built a successful portfolio of 14 rental properties generating $50,000/month in income by renting out homes by the bedroom to students and professionals near college campuses. Now financially free, he spends his time coaching others and maintaining a disciplined approach to growth while avoiding low-quality competition and preserving strong tenant relationships. Today we discuss... 

  • Ryan Chaw transitioned from a pharmacist to a real estate investor inspired by his grandfather’s success in Bay Area real estate.
  • He began investing in 2016 with a $262,000 property in Stockton, California, renting it by the bedroom to maximize cash flow.
  • His strategy involves converting 3-bedroom homes into 5- or 6-bedroom rentals and leasing them to students and professionals.
  • Ryan now owns 14 rental properties generating $50,000 per month in income and has fully replaced his pharmacist salary.
  • Most of his tenants come from word-of-mouth referrals, especially from student communities at nearby colleges.
  • Properties that would rent for $1,500–$2,200 annually generate $4,000+ per month when rented by the room.
  • Competition in his niche is limited and often low quality, with few landlords offering the same level of service.
  • Ryan sees consistent long-term demand with students signing multi-year leases and bringing in future tenants.
  • Ryan targets neighborhoods favored by graduate students and healthcare professionals by researching Reddit forums for off-campus housing recommendations.
  • He rents to both students and healthcare workers, often securing two-year leases from medical residents and fellows.
  • He continues to acquire at least one new property per year and currently owns 14 rentals.
  • He recommends keeping $7,000 to $10,000 per property in reserves to cover unexpected maintenance like HVAC or roof issues.
  • He clusters tenants by category (e.g., pharmacy students, dental students, healthcare workers) to foster a sense of community.
  • His four key success factors for student rentals are proximity to campus, neighborhood safety, affordability, and tenant community.
  • Ryan uses VAs to triage maintenance requests and relies on a vetted contractor network to address issues within 24 to 48 hours.

Today's Panelists:

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For more information, visit the show notes at https://moneytreepodcast.com/bedroom-real-estate-ryan-chaw-726 

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Money Tree Investing Podcast.

0:04.8

Stock market, wealth, personal finance, value stocks, invest in your life.

0:10.9

Hello, Smart Money Tree Podcast listeners.

0:12.8

Welcome to the sweet show.

0:13.9

My name's Kirk Chisholm.

0:14.8

I'll be your host.

0:15.5

So today I'm joined with Ryan Chaw.

0:17.5

Hey, do you, Ryan?

0:18.2

I'm doing great.

0:18.9

Thank you, Kirk.

0:19.6

Well, glad you having the show.

0:21.3

Ryan, before we jump in, tell us a bit about your background. I was a pharmacist turned real estate

0:26.6

investor. I basically was inspired again to real estate investing from my grandpa, who bought a couple

0:32.8

properties in the Bay Area back in the 1950s. And as we all know, the properties there appreciated like crazy,

0:39.8

the rents went up, and he was not only able to retire early, but help cover part of my college

0:44.7

tuition and that of my brother. So I realized that real estate was one of the best ways to create

0:49.8

generational wealth very early on in life. I just wanted to get started as soon as possible.

0:54.7

I graduated as a pharmacist in 2015, and I bought my first property in 2016. It was a $262,000

1:02.4

house in Stockton, California. And what I did is I rented out by the bedroom to essentially

1:08.7

double the rental income that I could make on that property. And I

1:13.0

continued doing this because it worked so well. And what I did is I rented to my alma mater

1:18.8

pharmacy students, just kind of continued on renting to professionals, grad students,

...

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