Real estate gets a lot easier when the asset itself does not fight you every day.
That’s what stands out about Kevin Bupp’s approach. Over two decades, he’s focused on two categories most investors overlook at first:
Neither is hands-off on day one. But both can become low-maintenance and predictable once the operations are clean and the systems are in place.
In an episode of the DealMachine REI Podcast, Kevin Bupp breaks down how he’s built steady cash flow through mobile home parks and parking assets. Want to hear the full interview? Watch the full episode here:
Mobile home parks and parking assets can be lower-maintenance because they are land-based income streams with fewer interior repairs. When operations are tight, the work shifts toward standards, pricing, collections, and consistency instead of constant emergencies.
Kevin’s through-line is simple:
Mobile home parks and parking share the same advantage. You are operating income on land with fewer interior finishes, fewer emergencies, and fewer things that break compared to many traditional rentals.
That does not mean there is no work. It means the work is usually more predictable.
Kevin bought his first property at 20 after spending about 14 months working alongside a mentor for free while he was in community college and bartending nights.
He followed his mentor’s buy-and-hold model at first. Then reality hit.
He put basically all he had, around $7,000, into the deal. The cash flow was only a few hundred dollars a month. He described it clearly. He became asset-rich and cash-poor overnight.
This is where a lot of investors get stuck.
Owning one rental property is not the same as building a business. If the cash flow cannot support the next move, you end up waiting years to buy the next property.
So he adjusted.
Kevin did not learn wholesaling from YouTube. There was no content ecosystem. He learned it by necessity and observation.
His mentor had a strong portfolio but was not marketing aggressively. Kevin leaned into simple local outreach:
The phone started ringing.
He got two properties under contract that he could not afford to close on. His mentor stepped in, bought them, and paid Kevin assignment fees of about $5,000 and $6,000.
That was the lightbulb moment.
Kevin’s model became:
Not glamorous. Very effective for building capital without overextending.
If you are early in your investing journey, this is worth remembering. Sometimes the best strategy is the one that helps you build cash and skill at the same time.
A lot of people approach experienced investors with a vague offer.
What can I do for you?
Kevin did something better. He watched where his mentor struggled and offered specific help.
His mentor was old-school and overwhelmed by technology and follow-up. Voicemails were not getting returned. Leads were falling through the cracks. Rentals were sitting vacant longer than they needed to.
Kevin positioned himself as a lever:
His pitch was simple. I will work for free, and I will buy you time back.
That approach made him useful immediately. And usefulness leads to access.
He later shared a parallel story about his business partner, Brian Spear, who earned partnership the same way. Persistence, clear value, and eventually even putting capital into a deal to prove commitment.
The takeaway is simple.
If you want proximity to people doing what you want to do, show them exactly how you make their day easier.
Kevin shared that he lost everything in 2008 after expanding into different commercial property types, including retail, industrial, office, and self-storage.
That reset pushed him back toward fundamentals:
By 2011, he was introduced to mobile home parks. In 2012, he bought his first one.
His first park was a 34-space mobile home park in the Atlanta area. It was REO, had been vacant for about a year, and served as a clean restart.
The numbers were straightforward:
That refinance returned his invested capital, and he repeated the model.
This is the value-add loop he leaned into:
Kevin said about 80 percent of their portfolio came from direct-to-owner marketing.
Early on, there was no clean list of mobile home parks you could just buy. So his team built it manually:
A key detail is that most sellers were not distressed. They were simply in a life season where selling made sense:
The remaining deals came through brokers, especially specialty brokers in manufactured housing.
And brokers tend to bring deals to groups known for one thing.
Closing cleanly.
Kevin’s team built a reputation for:
That reputation becomes deal flow.
When asked whether they buy the park only or also the homes, Kevin was clear.
In a perfect world, they prefer to own zero homes.
They want the residents to own the units and pay lot rent.
Residents who own their homes tend to stay longer. Kevin mentioned residents who have stayed more than 40 years in some communities.
And operationally, it is simpler:
Today they still own around 400 homes, roughly 20 percent of their inventory, mostly because prior owners converted homes into rentals over time. But the direction is clear. Reduce that share when possible.
Parking is Kevin’s second lane. He started buying parking assets in 2020 and now focuses on:
Surface lots are simple. Outside of periodic patching and restriping every few years, the work is mostly operations, pricing, cleanliness, and collections.
Garages can be great too, but Kevin flagged a major underwriting factor.
Climate.
In cold environments, salt and moisture can accelerate concrete deterioration and rebar corrosion. That raises long-term capital expenses. His group tends to favor Sun Belt markets where that risk is lower.
He also noted the pricing difference between asset types:
This is not a simple rule-of-thumb business. It is deal-by-deal underwriting based on levers and debt structure.
Kevin shared an example of a Charlotte garage near the Spectrum Center with just under 900 spaces. The equipment was only about eight years old, but outdated relative to current parking technology. They invested about $150,000 into new equipment and software that enabled dynamic pricing in real time.
Before, the prior owner could adjust pricing 24 hours ahead of events. Now they can adjust minute by minute. If an event is starting and the garage is not full, they drop pricing a few dollars to pull in the last wave of drivers.
That one change drove about 8 percent more revenue, translating into hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional top-line income. Then he layered in the basics that matter more than people think.
Lighting and Safety Perception
If the lower floors are dim, people leave. He called out that many women will not park where they do not feel safe.
Cleanliness and Visible Presence
They keep porters on site to pick up trash and maintain a clear we care signal. Presence also helps reduce loitering and issues that can impact occupancy.
Pricing Discipline
They research competitor rates three times a year. In Charlotte, they found the garage was about $1.75 below market on hourly rates even though it was the most convenient option. They raised rates by $1.50 and saw no attrition because demand was inelastic.
The parking lesson is simple. Small operational fixes plus disciplined pricing can produce major gains without major renovation.
Kevin made a helpful distinction.
Parking owners are rarely motivated sellers in the way we talk about in single family. Many are debt-free and already cash flowing.
Motivation tends to be life-driven:
He shared a surface lot example. An owner held it for about 40 years, generated around $1 million a year in revenue, and kept pricing low because raising rates would not change his lifestyle.
He sold primarily for estate planning. Kevin’s team raised rates a couple dollars per hour and increased value quickly.
Both sides won.
The seller got the outcome he wanted. The buyer captured upside through simple execution.
If you are patient and fair, you do not need a distressed seller to find a good deal.
Kevin started Sunrise in 2014 to build a scalable organization and fund structure.
They now focus on only two lanes:
For accredited investors, their fund structure includes:
He also explained how preferred returns can accrue while assets are still in turnaround, with liquidity events often coming from refinances after stabilization or selective sales.
The point is alignment. It is built into the structure.
They addressed a common confusion.
RV parks are often transient and seasonal. Mobile home parks are generally permanent housing.
Kevin added an important nuance. In Sun Belt states like Florida, Arizona, and Texas, many RV parks have evolved into more permanent communities. Some include park model homes or tiny-home style units classified as RVs, and residents may live there year-round.
So the zoning label can say RV, but the operational reality can look more like manufactured housing.
If you are evaluating these, focus on:
Kevin’s story is not about chasing the hottest niche. It is about choosing assets that reward consistent execution.
Here are the themes that came through clearly:
If you are exploring either of these asset types, a good place to start is not buying one tomorrow. It is learning the operational levers and building the relationship muscle that creates deal flow over time.
That is where low-maintenance actually comes from. Not the asset itself. The systems behind it.