Quick answer: Yes, 3 rental properties can fund financial freedom if they’re in solid locations, run on conservative NOI (net operating income) math, financed with fixed-rate debt, and held long enough for rents and equity to grow. The early years may look boring (even breakeven), but the long-term math can be surprisingly powerful.
This guide is for investors who want a small rental portfolio strategy that’s realistic: clear numbers, simple underwriting, and a plan you can run alongside a busy life. You’ll learn how coast FI works with rentals, how to calculate NOI, why breakeven can still be okay, and what risks to plan for so your portfolio stays calm and sustainable.
In an episode of the DealMachine Real Estate Investing Podcast, Chad Carson breaks down how a “small and mighty” plan, just three rentals, can grow into long-term cash flow, equity, and more time freedom. Want the full walkthrough? Watch the full episode below:
3 rental properties can create financial freedom by combining steady NOI, fixed-rate debt, and long holding periods. Over time, rising rents and shrinking loan balances can turn a small portfolio into meaningful cash flow and equity.
Scaling fast can work, but it usually comes with more moving parts: more debt exposure, more tenants, more rental property maintenance, more systems, and more stress. A small portfolio is easier to operate and easier to stick with.
The small-and-mighty goal is simple: build the smallest portfolio that still meets your goals, so you can keep your time and energy for the parts of life that matter most.
Financial freedom doesn’t have to mean never working again. For many investors, it means options, reducing hours, changing careers, or stepping away from a job they don’t enjoy without fear.
Coast FI in real estate means you build a base of rental properties early, then ease off the grind while your properties keep growing in the background through rent increases, loan paydown, and appreciation.
Full financial independence means your investments cover your living costs right now. Coast FI is earlier and often more realistic: you front-load effort for a few years, then make a life pivot while still staying on track long-term.
Fixed-rate debt gives you stability. Rent can rise over time, but your principal-and-interest payment stays mostly the same. That widening gap is where a lot of long-term rental cash flow comes from.
The plan is straightforward: buy one rental per year for three years, focusing on stable locations and conservative NOI math.
A practical example:
Example (adjust to your market):
There are many ways to find deals, on-market, off-market, value-add, or even zoning-based plays like a replat or small subdivision. The strategy doesn’t require complex development. The core requirement is buying something you can hold comfortably for the long run.
NOI (Net Operating Income) shows what your rental produces after operating costs, before the mortgage, so you can judge whether the property can stand on its own.
NOI = Rent – Operating Expenses
Operating expenses often include taxes, insurance, management, maintenance, and required fees.
Here’s a simple example:
If your mortgage payment is about $1,200/month, you’re close to breakeven, which leads to the next question.
Yes, breakeven can be okay if the NOI is real, the location is strong, and you have reserves. Over time, rent growth and loan amortization can turn breakeven into meaningful cash flow.
Breakeven deals aren’t “cash flow kings” in year one. But they can still be strong buy-and-hold properties when:
Many rentals start slow and improve over time as rent rises and the mortgage stays stable. The biggest change often comes later, not in the first year.
A simple timeline:
In the example model, three rentals could eventually reach around $108,000/year in cash flow once mortgages are paid off (projection).
This plan is best for investors who want steady progress with fewer moving parts, and who are willing to hold long-term.
This strategy is a good fit if you:
This strategy may not fit if you:
You build it by combining disciplined saving with repeatable underwriting and a clear buy box.
The point of this strategy isn’t to build the biggest portfolio, it’s to build enough. If you buy quality rentals, calculate NOI carefully, keep reserves, and hold long-term, three rentals can grow into real cash flow and meaningful net worth over time.
Build the smallest portfolio that meets your goals, protect it with conservative math, and let time do the heavy lifting.