Showing posts with label ROI Caclulator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ROI Caclulator. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Notre Dame Parent Real Estate ROI Calculator | Tim Vicsik

ND Parent Buyer Series · Part 3 of 9 · Investment Strategy

4 years of college, one smart real estate move: the ND parent investment calculator

Most parents have never actually run the numbers. Once you do, the question isn't whether buying near Notre Dame makes sense — it's why you'd ever choose not to.

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate · 9 min read

There's a moment in almost every conversation I have with an ND parent buyer. It happens right after I walk them through the four-year math for the first time. There's a pause. Sometimes they ask me to run it again. Then someone usually says: "Why didn't anybody tell us this sooner?"

That moment is what this post is designed to create — for you, right now, before your student's first semester even starts.

I'm Tim Vicsik with Trueblood Real Estate, and the Notre Dame area market is my entire focus. What I've watched, year after year, is that the families who buy near campus instead of renting don't do it because they're wealthier or more financially sophisticated. They do it because someone showed them the actual numbers early enough to act on them.

This post is that conversation. We're going to build the math together — step by step — and then I'm going to hand you a calculator so you can run your own scenario right on this page.

· · ·

How the four-year math actually works — step by step

Let's build this from scratch so every number is visible. No black boxes. No assumptions you can't verify. Here's how a $250,000 condo purchase near Notre Dame pencils out over four years.

1
The purchase — what you're putting in

Working with a $250,000 condo. With a 20% down payment, you're bringing $50,000 to the table and financing $200,000. That's your starting position.

Your monthly mortgage payment at current rates (we'll use 7.0% for a 30-year fixed, conservative for today's market) runs approximately $1,331/month in principal and interest. Add property taxes (~$175/mo), HOA fees (~$250/mo), and insurance (~$65/mo), and your total monthly cost lands around $1,821 per month.

Total monthly PITI + HOA: ~$1,821/mo
2
The roommate income — the number that changes everything

Your student doesn't have to live alone. A well-located 2BR condo near Notre Dame commands $700–$800/month for the second bedroom from a classmate. A 3BR unit can support two roommates, bringing in $1,400–$1,600/month in total rental income.

For our base case, we'll use a 2BR with one roommate at $750/month. That income flows directly against your monthly cost.

$1,821 − $750 rental income = $1,071 effective monthly cost
3
The four-year cash comparison — rent vs. own

Average rent for a comparable 2BR near Notre Dame runs $1,300–$1,500/month. We'll use $1,350. Over 48 months, that's $64,800 — completely gone, with nothing to show for it.

Owning at $1,071 effective cost over 48 months equals $51,408 total out of pocket — plus your $50,000 down payment. That's $101,408 total invested. But here's where it gets interesting: you now own an asset, not a receipt.

Rent total: $64,800 gone · Own total: $51,408 + $50K down (invested)
4
Appreciation — what the market does for you while you sleep

The Notre Dame area has appreciated at a consistent 3–5% annually in recent years, driven by limited inventory, stable university demand, and the area's strong alumni buyer pool. At a conservative 3.5% annual appreciation, your $250,000 condo grows to approximately $287,000 by graduation.

That $37,000 in appreciation happened without you lifting a finger. Your tenant's rent helped pay the mortgage. And your asset quietly grew in value the entire time.

$250,000 → ~$287,000 at 3.5%/yr over 4 years (conservative estimate)
5
Equity at graduation — the number that ends the debate

After 48 months of payments, your mortgage balance has dropped from $200,000 to approximately $187,000 (you've paid down roughly $13,000 in principal). Your property is worth ~$287,000. Subtract the remaining mortgage and you're sitting on approximately $100,000 in equity at graduation day.

Your original down payment of $50,000 has effectively doubled — and you spent less per month than you would have renting.

~$287K value − ~$187K balance = ~$100,000 equity at graduation
· · ·

Run your own numbers — the ND parent ROI calculator

The scenario above uses conservative assumptions. Your situation might look different depending on your budget, how many roommates you're comfortable with, and what the market does. Use the calculator below to build your own projection.

ND Parent 4-Year ROI Calculator
Adjust the inputs to match your situation — results update instantly
Purchase Price
$
Typical ND-area range: $175K–$350K
Down Payment %
%
20% avoids PMI · cash buyers use 100%
Monthly Rental Income
$
1 roommate: ~$750 · 2 roommates: ~$1,400
Annual Appreciation %
%
ND area recent avg: 3–5% · conservative: 3%
Equity at Graduation
Saved vs. Renting
Purchase price
Down payment
Estimated property value at graduation
Remaining mortgage balance
Total rental income collected (4 yrs)
Total out-of-pocket (4 yrs, after rental income)
Net equity position at graduation

Want Tim to run this with real properties currently on the market?

Get a Free Personalized Estimate →
A note on these projections

The calculator uses standard mortgage math and conservative appreciation assumptions based on recent ND-area market trends. Actual results vary by property, rate environment, and market conditions. These numbers are educational illustrations — not a guarantee. For projections tied to specific available properties, reach out to Tim directly and he'll run the real numbers with you.

· · ·

Three real scenarios — conservative, base, and optimistic

Not every family's situation looks the same. Here are three complete scenarios showing how the math plays out across different price points and roommate strategies. Click each tab to explore.

Conservative scenario
$210K condo · 1 roommate · 3% annual appreciation · 7% mortgage rate
Purchase price$210,000
Down payment (20%)$42,000
Monthly mortgage + taxes + HOA + ins.$1,548/mo
Rental income (1 roommate)−$700/mo
Effective monthly cost$848/mo
Total out-of-pocket over 4 years$40,704
Estimated value at graduation (3% appreciation)$236,400
Remaining mortgage balance~$157,200
Net equity at graduation~$79,200
Base case scenario
$250K condo · 1 roommate · 3.5% appreciation · 7% mortgage rate
Purchase price$250,000
Down payment (20%)$50,000
Monthly mortgage + taxes + HOA + ins.$1,821/mo
Rental income (1 roommate)−$750/mo
Effective monthly cost$1,071/mo
Total out-of-pocket over 4 years$51,408
Estimated value at graduation (3.5% appreciation)$287,000
Remaining mortgage balance~$187,000
Net equity at graduation~$100,000
Optimistic scenario
$275K condo (3BR) · 2 roommates · 5% appreciation · 6.5% mortgage rate
Purchase price$275,000
Down payment (20%)$55,000
Monthly mortgage + taxes + HOA + ins.$1,960/mo
Rental income (2 roommates @ $725 each)−$1,450/mo
Effective monthly cost$510/mo
Total out-of-pocket over 4 years$24,480
Estimated value at graduation (5% appreciation)$334,400
Remaining mortgage balance~$203,700
Net equity at graduation~$130,700

Even in the conservative scenario, the family walks away from graduation with nearly $80,000 in equity — nearly double their original $42,000 down payment — while spending far less per month than they would have paid in rent.

· · ·

The four-year timeline — what this actually looks like year by year

Y0
Before move-in day
Buy with intention
Identify the right neighborhood and property type for your goals. Get pre-approved, run the roommate math, review the HOA docs. The earlier in this process you start, the more options you have. The best properties near campus do not wait. Browse current ND condos and homes and villas to get a feel for what's available before your student's first semester.
Y1
Freshman year
Set up the roommate income stream
Your student moves in. Their classmate(s) move in as paying roommates. The rental income starts flowing against the mortgage. Your effective monthly cost is already lower than it would have been renting. Consider a simple written lease agreement for the roommate — it protects everyone and sets clear expectations from the start. Notre Dame's off-campus housing demand is strong from the moment school starts.
Y2
Sophomore year
Refinance watch + tax advantages kick in
If rates have moved in your favor, evaluate a refinance. You're also now in full swing on the rental income strategy — and depending on your tax situation, the mortgage interest deduction and rental income treatment can create meaningful additional benefits. Talk to your CPA about how the property flows through your return. Also: if your student is taking on a different roommate this year, the lease renewal is a good time to revisit the rental rate.
Y3
Junior year
Start thinking about your exit — or your hold
By junior year, you have enough market data to make a smarter decision about what happens at graduation. Get a current market valuation. Look at comparable sales. If you're considering selling at graduation, this is when to start preparing the property. If you're holding, start thinking about what kind of tenant you want after your student leaves — student rentals near ND maintain strong demand year over year.
Y4
Senior year → Graduation
Execute your exit strategy — or set up long-term income
Diploma in hand, equity in the bank. Now you choose from three options — sell, rent, or hold for personal use. Each one is a win. The family that rented for four years writes their last check and walks away with nothing. You walk away with a decision and a six-figure asset position.
· · ·

What happens at graduation — your three exits

Option 01
Sell and walk away with your equity

List the property at graduation, collect the proceeds, and move on. This is the cleanest exit and the most common choice for parents who bought primarily for the college years.

After agent fees and closing costs (~8–9%), you're netting your equity minus those costs. Still a strong return on your original down payment.

Base case net proceeds after costs
~$85,000–$92,000
Option 02
Hold and rent it out long-term

ND-area rental demand doesn't end when your student graduates. New students, faculty, university staff, and young professionals create consistent year-round demand for well-located units.

At a $1,400–$1,600/month market rent and a ~$1,071 effective mortgage cost, you're looking at positive monthly cash flow. And the property keeps appreciating.

Estimated monthly cash flow (base case)
+$330–$530/mo
Option 03
Keep it for game weekends & personal use

Notre Dame draws over 80,000 fans to campus on seven home Saturdays per year. Alumni who own near the stadium never pay $600+/night in hotel rates again.

Rent it out on away weekends, block it for home games, and treat it as your permanent South Bend base. The property pays for itself and you keep the upside.

Avg. game-day rental rate per weekend
$1,200–$2,400/wknd

The renters walk away from graduation with four years of receipts. The owners walk away with three options and six figures in equity.

— Tim Vicsik, Trueblood Real Estate
· · ·

The one question I ask every ND parent

After going through all of this, there's one question I find myself asking in almost every parent conversation — not to pressure anyone, but because the answer genuinely tells me a lot about where someone is in their thinking.

The question worth sitting with

"I'm just curious — have you ever actually run the numbers on what your out-of-pocket cost would be after rental income? Most parents I work with hadn't — and the answer surprised them. What would it take for this to feel realistic for your situation?"

The answer to that question shapes everything — which neighborhood makes sense, what price range to focus on, whether a condo or a house fits better. If you've run the calculator above and want to take the next step, the most useful thing I can do is show you what's actually on the market right now and run the real numbers against specific properties.

That's a 15-minute conversation, and it costs nothing. You can browse what's currently available at ND-Condos.com and reach out whenever you're ready.

Get a free personalized ROI estimate

Tell me your budget and what you're trying to accomplish. I'll run the numbers against real current listings and show you exactly what the math looks like for your specific situation.

Call or text Tim: 574-329-9587  ·  Tim@TimVicsik.com

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate

Tim specializes in condos and homes near the University of Notre Dame, helping ND parents, alumni, and relocating buyers navigate one of the Midwest's most unique real estate markets. If you're thinking about buying near campus — for your student, for football weekends, or as a long-term investment — Tim knows this market better than anyone.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Why ND Parents Are Paying Rent When They Could Be Building Equity

ND Parent Real Estate  ·  South Bend, IN

Why ND parents are paying rent when they could be building equity

Four years of tuition is expected. Four years of rent money disappearing into thin air? That part is optional.

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist  ·  Trueblood Real Estate  ·  7 min read

The acceptance letter arrives. The pride is real. The tuition bill is real. And quietly, without much fanfare, another bill starts showing up every month for the next four years — rent near Notre Dame. Most ND families write that check without ever asking a simple question: what if we didn't have to?

I'm Tim Vicsik, a real estate specialist with Trueblood Real Estate who has spent years helping families navigate the neighborhoods around the University of Notre Dame. And the conversation I have more than any other? It goes something like this: a parent is two or three years into paying rent near campus, their student is about to graduate, and they do the math for the first time.

The number hits them like a cold glass of water.

This post is about showing you that math before that moment — so you have the chance to do something different.

· · ·

First, let's talk about what rent near Notre Dame actually costs

Decent student housing within a reasonable distance of Notre Dame's campus runs between $1,100 and $1,600 per month for a two-bedroom unit, depending on the neighborhood and condition. Let's use $1,300 as a working number — modest, but realistic for a unit your student would actually want to live in.

$1,300
Average monthly rent near ND campus (2BR)
$15,600
What that costs per year
$62,400
Total paid over 4 years
$0
Equity built. Zero. Nothing.

Over four years, you've written checks totaling $62,400 — and you have absolutely nothing to show for it. No asset. No appreciation. No return. The landlord got a very nice vacation, and you got the privilege of paying their mortgage for them.

The rent money is gone no matter what. The only question is whether it goes into someone else's equity — or yours.

— Tim Vicsik, Trueblood Real Estate
· · ·

What ownership near Notre Dame actually looks like

Let's build a real scenario — nothing exotic, nothing that requires being a millionaire. A well-located two-bedroom condo within walking or biking distance of campus. There are solid options in the $220,000–$260,000 range. We'll work with $240,000.

With a 20% down payment ($48,000), you're financing $192,000. At current rates, your total monthly payment — principal, interest, taxes, HOA fees, and insurance — lands around $1,700 to $1,850 per month. We'll call it $1,800 to be conservative.

On the surface, that looks more expensive than rent. But here's where it gets interesting.

The roommate multiplier — the number most parents never think about

Your student doesn't have to live alone. In fact, most ND students want roommates. A two-bedroom unit near campus — one room for your student, one room for a classmate — can generate rental income of $650 to $800 per month from that second bedroom alone.

The roommate math

Charge one roommate $700/month. Your effective monthly cost drops from $1,800 to $1,100 — and you're now paying less than rent while building equity in an asset you own. Many parents with a 3BR condo rent two rooms and reduce their net cost to well under $500/month.

· · ·

Side by side — the numbers don't lie

Renting near ND Owning near ND
Monthly payment$1,300/mo$1,800/mo
Rental income from roommate(s)$0−$700/mo
Effective monthly cost$1,300/mo$1,100/mo
Total out of pocket (4 years)$62,400$52,800 + $48K down
Estimated property value at graduation$265,000–$275,000*
Remaining mortgage balance~$183,000
Net equity at graduation$0~$82,000–$92,000

*Based on 3–4% annual appreciation, consistent with recent ND-area market trends. All figures are illustrative estimates and vary by property and market conditions.

Read that last row again. The family that rented walks away from graduation weekend with zero equity. The family that owned walks away with $82,000 to $92,000 in equity — enough to recover the original down payment and then some.

And that's the conservative scenario. Three-bedroom units with two roommates can reduce the family's effective monthly cost even further — sometimes to near zero — while the property quietly appreciates in the background.

· · ·

What happens at graduation — your three options

When your student walks across that stage, you've got choices that renters simply don't have:

Option 1 — Sell. List the condo and walk away with your equity. Use it to pay down other debt, fund a retirement account, or put it toward whatever comes next. Clean, simple, profitable.

Option 2 — Keep renting it out. ND-area condos rent consistently because there's always a new wave of students, faculty, and staff arriving. Positive cash flow is realistic if you've owned for a few years and managed it well.

Option 3 — Hold it for alumni weekends. Notre Dame's home football schedule alone draws 80,000+ fans seven Saturdays a year. Alumni who own near campus never pay $600/night for a hotel room again. (More on that in a future post.)

The point worth sitting with

Most ND families spend $60,000+ in rent near campus over four years without ever questioning it. The families who do question it — and act on what they find — consistently walk away from graduation in a significantly better financial position. Not because they're wealthier. Because they asked a different question at the right time.

· · ·

What I hear most from parents who waited

"We didn't think we could afford it." — In most cases, when we actually run the numbers together, the effective monthly cost after rental income is comparable to or less than what they paid in rent. The down payment is the real hurdle, and there are strategies to address that too.

"We just didn't know it was possible." — This one is the most common. Nobody told them. Their financial advisor wasn't thinking about it. The university doesn't advertise it. It just wasn't on their radar.

That's exactly why I write posts like this one.

Something worth considering

"I'm just curious — when you look at these numbers, what's the first thing that comes to mind? A lot of parents I talk to say the biggest surprise is how close the monthly cost actually is. What would make this feel realistic for your situation?"

· · ·

A few things worth knowing about this market

The neighborhoods around Notre Dame behave differently than most markets. Demand is unusually stable — the university isn't going anywhere, enrollment is consistent, and alumni loyalty to South Bend is unlike anything I've seen elsewhere. That translates to properties that hold their value and appreciate steadily, even when broader markets get choppy.

Inventory near campus is also limited. We're not building a lot of new units within walking distance of Notre Dame. That supply constraint matters when you're thinking about long-term value.

If you'd like a deeper look at the market — current price ranges, what's available, typical HOA structures — I'm happy to walk through it with you personally. No pressure, just information.

See what the numbers look like for your situation

Every family's scenario is a little different. I'll run the actual numbers with you — purchase budget, rental income potential, net monthly cost — no obligation.

Browse available condos at ND-Condos.com

Or reach out directly: 574-329-9587  ·  Tim@TimVicsik.com

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist  ·  Trueblood Real Estate

Tim specializes in condos and homes near the University of Notre Dame, helping ND parents, alumni, and relocating buyers navigate one of the Midwest's most unique real estate markets. If you're thinking about buying near campus — for your student, for football weekends, or as an investment — Tim knows this market better than anyone.

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