Top 5 Real Estate Investing Programs In 2024: Which One Is The King Of The Hill?

Real estate has created some of the largest fortunes in world history.

The Waltons of “Walmart” fame.

The British Royal Family.

Jeff Bezos.

Rockefeller, Carnegie, Vanderbilt, Rothschild, Ford – you name it.

Most dynasties and powerful families have a significant portion of their wealth (and power) tied to real estate.

In fact, 90% of millionaires own real estate..

So it only makes sense that you do as well, right?

Maybe.

I’ve bought a handful of properties myself, and let me tell you, real estate isn’t for everyone.

In my opinion (spoiler alert!), real estate is great for expanding existing wealth… not creating it in the first place.

That said, if you’re looking to get into real estate investing, chances are you’re already scouring the internet for programs to teach you how to do it.

Unfortunately, the industry is filled with a lot of snake oil salesmen. A guru that seems genuine may just turn out to be a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Which begs the question – “well, how do I find out which is which?”

That’s what this article is for! Rather than getting burned by another online scam, I’m here to save you time and point you in the right direction.

So what I’ll do for you is tell you the best real estate investing programs, and I’ll also dig into what’s actually inside these courses. Plus, I’ll help you figure out whether real estate is even something that’s a right fit for you, or if there are better alternatives out there for helping you reach your first 6-figures as an entrepreneur.

Okay, let’s get rolling!

Brief Overview

If you’re more of the “gimmie what I want now!” types, here’s a table breaking down the Top 3 programs and who they’re best for:

Top ProgramsMethodologyBest For
King Khang Wholesale to MillionsWholesalingPeople with no capital
Pace Morby SubTo CourseProperty RentalsPeople with some cashflow
Ryan Pineda Future FlipperFlippingExperienced investors

As with anything in life, the devil is in the details… so let’s break down the Top 5 programs and which one makes the most sense for you!

Top 5 Real Estate Investing Programs Review

#5 - Justin Colby Insider Academy

Best For

Beginners looking to dabble in real estate or are willing to pay a bit to find out what real estate investing really looks like

Methodology

Multiple Real Estate Investment Strategies

Price

$997

Key Facts About The Program

What I Like

What I Didn't Like

Overview

At the price of $997, there’s not a lot of real estate courses out there that deliver more bang for your buck.. Which is why it cracks our top 5.

While the course does offer a lot, it’s meant to be an entry-level course. Think of it like an appetizer, where you get to sample all of the different ways to make money with real estate, but there’s not a deep dive on any one particular strategy – That’s exactly what Justin Colby’s Insider Academy is.

What that means to you: it’s cool to explore different models and strategies, but it’s not enough information to actually make money with it

If you want more hands-on help, he does provide a mentorship program, and that likely costs north of $15,000 based on others in the industry with similar offerings.

The focus of the Insider Academy is teaching you his top 2 strategies for finding deals for free. That means you’re not gonna be throwing money at Facebook, hoping things stick.

Of course, paid traffic will get you results much faster… It’s like fishing with a rod vs a net.

With a rod, you’re gonna have to wait hours, hoping that a sea bass bites. Or you can cast a large net and scoop up all the fish at once.

And then my other major gripe with the Insider Academy is that there’s no step-by-step instruction.

Sure, you could bounce around to the resource library, Google your life away, and stumble into success…

But as a beginner, you want clear direction as to which method to choose first, or which one makes most sense given your unique life circumstances.

I’m all for adding more stuff to a program, but too much stuff just overwhelms people unless you’re given exact step-by-step instructions on which order to do things.

And the fact that he doesn’t offer a refund is something that doesn’t sit well with me..

In summary, the main reason it’s not Top 3: it doesn’t give you enough practical information to actually make money with real estate investing. You will have to buy another program shortly after this one.

Biggest Selling Points

Biggest Red Flags

Bottom Line

Justin gives a good overview of what you can do in real estate. He shows you free methods, but ultimately, you’re gonna need access to funding to acquire the assets.

If this has already turned you off of Real Estate Investing… don’t lose hope! We’ve got some other options coming up shortly, and some alternatives to Real Estate Investing toward the end.

#4 - King Khang Wholesale To Millions

Best For

People who are already good at sales

Methodology

Real estate wholesaling

Price

$1,495

Key Facts About The Program

What I Like

What I Didn't Like

Overview

King Khang is all about wholesaling. He wants you to land as many deals as humanly possible.

The reason? On the surface, wholesaling has the broadest appeal among beginners because it’s the least capital intensive (AKA takes the least amount of money to get started with).

Wholesale to Millions Academy is his flagship program with three courses in one:

  1. Complete Wholesaling Playbook → how to wholesale, “A to Z”
  2. Virtual Wholesaling → how to do it remotely, AKA not in the city you’re currently in
  3. Amazing Selling Scripts → how to talk to people the right way

Here’s the good thing: this is probably one of the most comprehensive programs I’ve seen on real estate wholesaling for beginners.

First, there’s the core program, which comes with instructional how-to videos on how to find motivated sellers and cash buyers. He tells you where to look for them and even geographic hot spots so that you get a continuous lead flow.

Beyond that, there’s a bunch of bells and whistles like sales scripts, live-recorded sales calls, objection handling, closing document templates, and even virtual assistant SOPs.

Wholesaling might be good for beginners with no capital. He’s got a lot to offer, and with community support, you won’t be left in the dark.

That said, it seems like the organization could be an issue with the program. One student links that the templates are all over the place.

So think of it more like you’re hanging out in a really old library that has all the information you could ever need… but you just don’t know where to actually look. Which book do you read first? Is it even relevant to what you need? Who’s in charge of cleaning this place, anyway, there’s dust everywhere!

So you might be asking yourself right now: sounds like a dream, so why is it #4????

My real concern has to do with his shady sales tactics and the business model as a whole.

Let’s talk about that for a second. Do you really want to be the guy that’s kicking families out of their homes because they can’t afford their mortgage payments? Watching little Sally cry her eyes out because her family home is being ripped away…

The sales scripts might be there for you… but is that really something you want to sell?

Basically, you’re hitting up distressed property owners (people in dire financial situations) who have defaulted on their mortgage payments. You help them sell their home fast, but you poke and prod until they give up their homes for pennies on the dollar.

While I appreciate the hustle, I don’t like the feeling of taking advantage of other people’s misfortune.

That’s why I prefer other business models where you’re actually helping real people (if you’ve read our blog for a while, you know what I’m talking about. If not you can click here to read about how the Digital Real Estate model works… it’s inspired by the physical real estate model).

So to put it all in one nice little sentence: you might be able to make money… but you’ll be selling your soul to make it happen.

Biggest Selling Points

Biggest Red Flags

Bottom Line

While wholesaling is great, the unpredictable nature of it all is something most people can’t stomach. And worse, you’re taking advantage of people’s misfortunes by getting them to give up their homes for a huge discount.

#3 - Brian Page BNB Formula

Best For

People with little capital

Methodology

Airbnb Arbitrage

Price

$1,997

Key Facts About The Program

What I Like

What I Didn't Like

Overview

Brian teaches you a way you can gamify the AirBnb system.. By leveraging other people’s property to make you more money.

The premise is that you pitch landlords on the idea of helping them land Airbnb bookings.

Meaning: you will be approaching landlords that have long term tenants (e.g., 1-2-3 year leases), and trying to convince them that they should in fact do Airbnb instead

The basic logic is this: you will make more money as a landlord renting short term and not having it rented all the time than you would renting long term to one person.

If I collect $1,500/mo long-term, but I could charge $200/night short term… well then I would make more money if I could rent more than 8 nights per month – that’s the basic idea here (obviously, it’s a lot more involved and difficult than it seems on the surface).

I do applaud Brian for providing training and step-by-step material. Unlike the other two programs above, things are structured on a weekly basis, so you know exactly what to focus on at any given time.

Beyond that, he gives you a ton of bonus resources like “Deal Analyzers” and other templates you might need.

BUT… here’s the thing: AirBnb is like the wild wild west, where anything goes…

One day you’re an outlaw robbing banks and drinking whiskey… the next day the sheriff is in town and the fun is over 🙁

Here’s what I mean:

AirBnb calls the shots. If they decide to change the rules, your business can flop overnight. And yes… this has happened many times before!

Competitors can get a better location and better furnishing, which undercuts your sales.

There’s a lot of local legal restrictions with AirBnb… Many of the most popular tourist destinations are banning short-term rentals so that the hospitality industry can thrive.. And if you get caught breaking the law, you gotta pay the fine.

I actually have a friend that spent a bunch of time and money renovating his basement to Airbnb it out. He made money for a few months… until the town changed the rules and he couldn’t rent it out anymore!

Brian also has a TON of controversy surrounding his course.

It seems like customers are dissatisfied that they haven’t gotten what they were promised:

And others have said that Brian’s team didn’t honor the refund policy (which, by the way, is a violation of federal law)

Just type in “BNB Formula reviews,” and you’ll find a long list of horror stories…

Biggest Selling Points

Biggest Red Flags

Bottom Line

If you live in a great location for AirBnb, maybe it could work for you… But again, it’s a very finicky business model. On top of that, Brian’s got more bad reviews than Kim K has ex-husbands…

If you want a more stable and predictable business model that can consistently bring in $2k, $5k, and even $10k+ per month, read my digital real estate breakdown here.

#2 - Pace Morby SubTo Course

Best For

People willing to make a serious investment into becoming a real estate investor

Methodology

Property Rental With Creative Financing

Price

$7,800 to $19,000

Key Facts About The Program

What I Like

What I Didn't Like

Overview

Pace Morby has “the ultimate counter” for wholesaling. He says that sellers know their value and aren’t gonna give up their home for pennies on the dollar when they see what prices are on Zillow..

Fair point..

So what do I do when I really want my hands on the property?

Enter stage left: Pace Morby’s “Sub-To” strategy. Instead of wholesaling, he goes to motivated sellers, specifically ones that want to change residences quickly. Usually due to life circumstances where the seller is facing:

  • Foreclosures
  • Sickness
  • Job change
  • Death in family
  • Divorce

Whatever the case, Pace CLAIMS he can take on your mortgage for the seller…

The whole “sub-to” refers to “subject-to” or “sub2”. What it means is that with some mortgages, you can basically take over someone else’s mortgage payments.

So instead of me selling my home, and using the proceeds to pay the bank off, I can sell the home and transfer the obligation of making those payments to someone else.

Here’s the issue: nearly all mortgages written in the past 20 years have a “due on sale” clause, meaning they effectively ban you from doing subject-to sales.

Translation: once again (hello King Khan) we are basically preying on old people that have owned their home for over 20 years and are now in a bad spot. There were actually some very public instagram reels recently where Pace was given a lot of sh*t for airing a video of him kicking some elderly folks out of their home:

 

 
 
 
 
 
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A post shared by John Dorsey (@goob_u2)


Anyway, getting back to sub-to:

It means you can technically acquire a property without going through the tedious bank qualification process, nor do you have to take on a new loan…

You don’t have to worry about credit checks, loan apps, closing costs, and paperwork..

You are just responsible for the rest of the seller’s mortgage payments; then you get the property…

He calls this the “sub-to” method.

Keep in mind that you’re still very limited to how many properties you can scoop up because you’re responsible for the remainder of the mortgage payments, however long the terms are set to. AND, they don’t really make subject-to loans any more.

I like the method because it is a less costly way to acquire rental properties… So if you’re sitting on a $200K+ salary, then you may be able to absorb a new mortgage or two at most…

But there’s a few glaring weaknesses:

  1. Due-on-sale clause: If there’s a due-on-sale clause in the mortgage, lenders could enforce the loan to be paid in full when transactions are made… So you gotta pay the ENTIRE mortgage if this is the case.
  2. Seller’s credit issues: If you fail to make mortgage payments, that’s gonna hurt the seller’s credit score.
  3. Taxes and insurance: You’re responsible for the property taxes, income taxes, and insurance.
  4. Moral Gray Area: I talk about this a lot on my blog… there are a lot of ways to make a living, but you should try to pick one that is more ethically sound!

Beyond that, there’s a lot of criticism online about Morby. Specifically, his calls are stuffed with 400 people, and lots of people are waiting their turn to ask for help.. So you might not even get your question ever answered!

Biggest Selling Points

Biggest Red Flags

Bottom Line

If you have the income to absorb debt, it could be a decent method. That said, beware of what you get into because you might absorb more financial debt than you realize…

#1 - Ryan Pineda Future Flipper

Best For

Intermediate or advanced real estate investors

Methodology

Primarily flipping, but covers other real estate investment strategies

Price

$8,000 to $60,000

Key Facts About The Program

What I Like

What I Didn't Like

Overview

Rounding off our top 5, is Ryan Pineda’s Future Flipper. When you choose to pay the hefty price of his program, you’re getting the whole nine yards.

Basically, you get to learn multiple ways to make money with real estate, including flipping, wholesaling, and property rental.

What really separates Future Flipper from other programs is the accountability coaches.

Having proven instructors check in on you and help you implement his teachings greatly increases your odds of success. Most people buy courses and fail to implement everything, which is why there’s such a high failure rate…

That said, let’s talk about the 500-lb gorilla in the room: money

If you pay $60K for a course… imagine how much you’re going to need to have to actually buy and fund your fix-and-flips?

I’d recommend only thinking about this program if you’re sitting on a liquid cash amount of over $150K.

Ryan says all you need is a deal or two to pay for the cost of the program..

The thing is, there’s a major assumption that everything goes right and that you find killer deals.

Not to mention you’re gonna be working for free until you do.

You’ll spend months finding the right deals and getting a beat-up house. Then you’re gonna need the skill to flip it and hopefully find a buyer willing to purchase at your desired price point…

I have a friend that does fix-and-flips throughout pockets of Georgia and South Florida. Wanna know how he is so successful?

He has a solid network of contractors that he partners on the deals with.

Meaning, he finds the properties and the buyers… but he has someone he really knows and trusts that does the actual renovations.

If you don’t have that… it’s a huge gamble (in my opinion!)

Especially if it’s your first time flipping houses…

If you’re new, you might squander your first deals. You’re gonna incur hidden costs when renovating houses… Or you might struggle to find buyers..

My advice is don’t go broken hoping Ryan is your savior. He’s not gonna come riding on his white horse to save you…

If flipping is your calling, try to learn it for free first to see if it’s a line of work you’re interested in doing.

The fact of the matter is this: real income (or “wealth”) takes time and sacrifice to make happen.

Biggest Selling Points

Biggest Red Flags

Bottom Line

If you’re an intermediate or advanced real estate investor, Ryan might show you insider knowledge to take you to the next level.

Otherwise, I’d stay away.. There’s a lot you need to know and look for when flipping, like renovating and how to spot good deals.

Buying Guide – How To Choose The Right Estate Investing Program For You

Alright, so you’ve read our Top 5 – now let’s talk a bit about what you should look for if you decide to keep researching on your own.

Handing your money to a complete stranger over the internet isn’t easy. I’ve done it many times before, so I get it…

I’ve spent over half a million dollars on coaching, programs, and mentorships… so I understand the anxiety and sense of risk which is tied up in a dream of becoming “something more” than you are right now.

At this point, you’re probably facing a dilemma.

You’re thinking, “I’m tired of not having XYZ, and the only way it’s gonna happen for me is by becoming an entrepreneur. This seemed the best bet for me, but there’s so many options out there.”

I get that too! I wish I had someone who could’ve told me right from wrong when I first started in online business.

So before you pull out your credit card, I’d say hold your horses and give this guide a good read.

I’m gonna give you a checklist of things to run through, think of it like a cheat sheet on how to evaluate these real estate programs, or any program for that matter:

Buyer’s guide criteria Description
Can I trust the guru with my money? Look for gurus who actually practice what they preach. They should make more money doing the thing than selling you a training about the thing (or at least they used to do the thing full time and were successful)
Does the program give me the training I need? The course should be thorough and give additional resources, like templates and checklists. It should be equal parts practical steps + theory behind decisions.
If things go south, can I get my money back? In case the course isn’t what you expect it to be, you should be able to ask for a refund.
Will I have access to mentorship and support? The best courses offer mentorship and support, so you’re not left alone.
Is the program worth the cost? The program should give you your money’s worth. If it’s a $5k program, it should give you A to Z on real estate investing with live coaching and an active community.
What are people saying about the program? Look at TrustPilot, BBB, and Reddit reviews for a more balanced perspective.
Can I get started with it right now? Buying a property requires $20k+ in down payment, which doesn’t include the cost of the course… If you don’t already have a lot of disposable income, you should look at the Digital Real Estate model.

Beyond this checklist, we’ll cover the main factors to consider, so you know what makes a real estate program a sound investment.

Coaching and Mentorship

Coaching and mentorship are at the heart of every great program. If the course doesn’t have one, you can remove them from your list.

…Unless you’re comfortable with implementing the material yourself and searching in the dark corners of the internet for answers.

Better to pay a little more for a program with coaching and mentorship, so that you increase your chances of success.

Personally, I look for a few things:

  • Live coaching calls at least a few times a week (most on this list unfortunately only give you a few per month)
  • Access to a coach via messaging or calls who gives you one-on-one coaching for personalized feedback

A coach should have your best interest and provide you the accountability and support you need.

Training Curriculum

I’m always flabbergasted every time I see a course with minimal content. I’ve seen countless courses with only a couple of hours of training curriculum with very surface-level content..

The course should dive into the weeds, sharing insider knowledge and practical strategies for real estate. You should be getting things like:

  • 10 lead sources to find off-market deals
  • Sales scripts for contacting and closing distressed property owners
  • Formulas to analyze whether a property is a good investment
  • Templates for the perfect listing to flip houses

All of the material should be copy-paste and easy-to-follow so that any beginner can do it.

If it’s stuffed with generalized content like “how mortgages work” or “benefits of real estate investing” I wouldn’t touch the program with a ten-foot pole.

You can often find the specific curriculum on their sales page or on a third-party course site like Teachable.

Community

Your net worth is your network.

I’ve been in dozens of programs myself, and the community is always something that makes or breaks the value…

Do you have a friend in there that you can reach out to on a moment’s notice to help you through a problem? If not, you’re doing yourself a major disservice.

A good program offers a private community channel, whether that’s in Discord, Skool, Facebook Groups, or Slack.

It’s hard to gauge how active a community will be before you make a purchase. I’d say look at TrustPilot and Reddit reviews. Or you can check out their free groups to see if there’s any engagement. Or, shameless plug, you can Google our website name + the course name + “reviews” and see what we have to say about it 🙂

The best programs are where you’ll make lifelong friends and even have people supporting you along the way.

So make sure you’re surrounded by engaging students who are all pushing each other to do their best.

Methodology

There’s many ways to skin a cat. To be specific, there’s a handful of ways to play the real estate game. Here are the major ways to play:

  1. Buy and hold (renting out to tenants)
  2. Fix and flip
  3. Wholesaling
  4. Short term rentals

They all have their pros and cons.

I’ll give you a brief rundown of each so you know what you’re getting into.

With buy and hold, you get to keep the property long-term, which means you can rake in profits month after month, relatively passively, once the mortgage is paid off. That said, you gotta deal with the management side of things like leaky faucets, a broken air conditioner, and anything else that comes up.

For fix and flip, it’s a one-time transaction. You buy up beat-up, undervalued homes to resell them for a higher price. Fixing up the house requires a lot of skill in knowing what renovations actually move the needle in the market.

With wholesaling, you’re talking to distressed property owners and getting them to give up their homes. You also need to have a network of investors willing to buy these homes. Finding these owners takes a lot of lead flow and sales skills to pull off.

Short-term rentals are when you rent out your property for less than a month, usually with Airbnb. You can potentially earn more, but the income is wildly unpredictable.

When looking into the program, you should understand the business model and think about if you can see yourself doing this line of work for the next 5 to 10 years..

Personally, I’d prefer something with a faster path to profit and less financial risk on myself.

Is Real Estate Investing Even Worth It?

Buying rental properties is very common advice you hear from everyone.

It’s not the worst way to make money, but it’s far from the best (for beginners, at least).

Real Estate Investing is great for people that are already well-off (high 6 or low 7-figure net worth).

Imagine you spend all of the hard-earned money that you’ve spent YEARS saving for a down payment on a rental property..

Mind you, it took you years of clocking in and out of your job, kissing your boss’ feet, shining his shoes, and working overtime just to drum up $100K for this house..

And now that you’ve saved up all that money, you’re hit with a bunch of downsides that your favorite guru forgot to mention, like agonizing over what the Federal Reserve decides to do with interest rates…

Here’s a prime example: In the US, it is now, on average, $1,100 more per month than it was in 2020 to pay for THE SAME HOUSE!!

Housing prices are rising, and there’s nothing you can do about it.

Now, if you already owned a bunch of these properties outright in cash, that wouldn’t be so much of a big deal. We call it putting your “dollars in the dirt”.

But in today’s environment, it becomes a losing proposition: you don’t get anything more for this house, you just pay more for the same exact thing! No fancy bathroom vanity, no extra in-ground swimming pool, none of that!

With real estate investing, you’ve got three paths you can take. Like Morpheus did in The Matrix, I’d like to show you what that looks like:

If you buy a house to rent out..

  • You’ll have rising mortgage payments, insurance, repairs, and other expenses.
  • You gotta be on call for tenants.
  • You have to save huge deposits and are now a slave to the bank to repay the loan and to whatever the government decides to do with the interest rates..
  • You have to deal with an illiquid asset.. Even if you’re rich on paper, you gotta cash it out (which would be taxed like crazy) to even enjoy your new-found fortune.


If you choose to fix and flip..

  • You might as well change your job title on LinkedIn to handyman..
  • You might get into a lotta debt tryna buy these fixer-upper homes (plus, you might get burned badly by a contractor).
  • You really don’t know whether the home will sell or not.
  • You better be prepared for a ton of unexpected costs.. A faulty air conditioner, an unforeseen molding problem.. Next thing you know, all your profits are gone.
  • Uncle Sam will take a huge chunk of the profits in tax on flipped properties.


You choose to wholesale houses.

  • You prey on desperate homeowners..
  • You’re hounding people all day, door-knocking, sending flyers or cold-calling folks tryna get sellers.
  • You spend months working for free with no guaranteed result, waiting for the big deal to land.


In my opinion, none of these options are worth your time and money until you’re at a point financially where you can stomach those costs several times over (AKA, scale your strategy very fast and take on the associated risks).

Even if you made it big with real estate investing, it’d take years to recoup your money..

Your bank owns the property until all the mortgage pays off..

Last time I checked, that’s not freedom.

The bank can easily take back your property should you default for payments for any reason, like not being able to find tenants..

Real estate is better for wealth management than cash flow generation.

It’s better served as a store of value than earning predictable recurring income..

With inflation rising and the value of the dollar plummeting, we can put our money into real estate rather than the bank..

But if you don’t have hundreds of thousands lying around in disposable income, the move you SHOULD be making is increasing your capacity for earning money now.

Conclusion – Here’s My #1 Alternative To Real Estate Investing (For Beginners)

Alright… if you read everything above (or if you skimmed well), you might now be thinking:

“Well sh*t, what should I do then?”

What is the best way to actually achieve financial freedom?

If you look around, you’ll hear a lot of “main stream” stuff:

Dropshipping, affiliate marketing, MLM, Amazon FBA… printing cute puppy pics on a t shirt and selling it to… puppy lovers.

What I want to introduce you to is a little known secret which is part of a larger multi-billion dollar industry.

It allows you to tap into a booming industry of over 400 million small businesses worldwide… and it mimics the same business model as Home Advisor, Angies List, Uber, and even Airbnb!

It’s something called “Digital Real Estate” (click here to read an entire article about how it works).

Here’s the short version:

It takes all the good parts about physical real estate without any of the bad.

With Digital Real Estate, you don’t have to worry about

  • Dealing with disgruntled tenants calling you during the wee hours of the night
  • Saving up years for a hefty down payment
  • Hoping and praying your next deal comes through this month
  • Legal red tape and interest rate woes

All you do is build simple “one-page landers” that attract ready-to-buy customers (think of it like a house).

Then you rent these one-page landers to local businesses who need customers… (think of them like tenants).

Kinda like putting up a “for rent” sign on a website ranked #1 in Google.

When business owners see the type of results you bring, they’ll happily pay you $500 to $2,000 month after month, practically on autopilot…

Just imagine for a second that you’re an incredibly talented Deck Builder…

You make around $10,000 every single time you build a new deck in and around your city…

Only problem? You’re pretty bad at marketing! And if you remember back to math class… $10,000 per deck x 0 decks = $0

Then one day someone calls you up out of the blue and says they can start sending you a few extra jobs per month!

You’re hesitant… but you agree, because – well, you’ve got bills to pay.

Next thing you know, you’ve landed 3 new deck jobs – $30,000 in unexpected income on the month (woohoo)!

Do you think you’d be willing to pay that mystical “someone” a few grand per month to keep the jobs flowing through? Obviously yes.

So, with only a few of such deck builders (or some other trade), you’re already making 6-figures and in a position to fire your boss, travel the country, take your parents or friends out to a nice dinner and pick up the bill without worry…

Imagine you found just one new client every month… That means it’ll take you only several months to make a comfortable living!

If you wanna learn more about how that model works, you can click here to read more.

Best of all, the entire business model is digital, so you’re not fixed to one geographic location like you are with real estate investing.

There’s nothing stopping you from just packing up your bags and flying across the world to Thailand…Or taking your family on a fun trip to Disneyland to ride Space Mountain.

Personally, if I had to restart my entrepreneurial journey again, I’d save myself years of heartache and jump straight into the Digital Real Estate model instead..

That said, if you wanna learn how it all works, just check out this guide that explains it all.

Who knows… maybe you can come back to building your real estate portfolio after you’re raking in an extra $5k to $10k/month with Digital Real Estate..