Ted and Jamie Garber turned a disciplined ‘buy box’ formula into a scalable real estate strategy, generating six figures and a 20%+ annual cash-on-cash return from 28 Florida rentals. Here’s how their strict purchase rules and focus on cash flow deliver outsized results—and what investors need to know right now.
Ted and Jamie Garber’s journey from new investors to landlords of 28 Florida rental units is a masterclass in applying a strict investment formula to real estate—one laser-focused on immediate cash flow, disciplined deal selection, and operational simplicity. Their story is more than a feel-good headline: it’s a detailed roadmap for investors who want results, not just doors.
- 28 rental units, 15 Florida properties—all acquired since 2020, with an average cash-on-cash return exceeding 20%.
- Six-figure annual income—pursued by treating every unit as a separate business and enforcing capital discipline at acquisition.
- The ‘buy box’ criteria—a tight focus on affordability, value-add potential, and the 1% rule for immediate cash flow.
How the Garbers Built Scale in a Hot Market
The Garbers, based in Florida’s high-demand Brevard County (the Space Coast), began investing in property as a way to accelerate their financial independence. Their approach: meticulous, localized, and focused on cash flow from day one. Unlike many investors who chase volume or appreciation, they demand that each property start generating cash flow immediately and target full investment payback within three to six years, as confirmed by the Brevard County Property Appraiser and their own detailed tracking [Business Insider].
Their expansion has all happened since 2020, a period marked by intense competition and rapid price growth across Sun Belt rental markets. Despite these challenges, the Garbers’ financial results—averaging just over 20% cash-on-cash ROI per unit—put them well above most benchmarks for small portfolio landlords.
The Buy Box: Defining Deals to Avoid Mistakes
Central to their system is the “buy box,” an investment filter that eliminates emotion and speculation from their process. Properties must:
- Be located in their immediate region, allowing tight oversight and operational control.
- Fit an affordability profile—targeting everyday renters, not luxury or deeply discounted segments.
- Offer rental rates at or below local market averages to attract strong tenant demand, reduce vacancies, and encourage better property care.
- Be acquired undervalued: The Garbers search for listings with weak marketing, cosmetic flaws, or long time-on-market for maximum negotiation leverage.
- Require only “light-lift” improvements (such as paint or flooring)—avoiding large renovation risk.
This rigorous criteria has enabled the Garbers to build their portfolio with above-market rent ratios and below-market risk.
The 1% Rule: Cash Flow First, Always
The strictest test in their buy box is the widely referenced 1% rule: Only acquire if the property can rent monthly for 1% or more of its purchase price (i.e., a $120,000 condo must rent for $1,200+ per month). With interest rates and insurance costs climbing, hitting this mark has become tougher—but the Garbers refuse to compromise, seeking “buffer room” by beating the 1% rule whenever possible [Business Insider].
- The 1% rule creates instant cash flow and cushions surprises.
- Properties are selected to pay back invested capital within three to six years, far faster than conventional models.
- Renting slightly below competing rates means higher tenant interest and improved tenant retention—directly increasing net returns.
ROI: Beyond the Rent Check
Although monthly cash flow drives their decisions, the Garbers also benefit from real estate’s other wealth-building levers:
- Appreciation: Steady housing demand in Brevard County continues to lift property values.
- Depreciation: Tax savings from property depreciation offset significant portions of rental income.
- Principal Paydown: Tenants’ rent payments steadily reduce the Garbers’ mortgage principal, increasing equity with each month.
Factoring depreciation and property appreciation into the equation, Ted Garber estimates the portfolio achieves a total annualized return north of 30%.
Resilience—And Lessons for Investors
The Garbers’ journey took off during a period of high supply competition, surging rates, and headline-driven investor panic. Their consistent results underscore how a strict acquisition filter, local expertise, and relentless focus on margin can outperform passive appreciation-based strategies—even as risks in real estate shift rapidly.
- Staying local, knowing your market deep.
- Prioritizing cash flow, not just asset growth.
- Using a “buy box” to strip out investment emotion and prevent bad deals at the screening stage.
The investing community has debated how sustainable the 1% rule and high-yield buy-and-hold will be with elevated borrowing costs. The Garber model demonstrates that, with enough discipline and local intelligence, it’s still possible to build—and sustain—six-figure real estate income in today’s environment.
To get more fast, high-clarity investment analysis and expert breakdowns like this one, keep your edge by reading onlytrustedinfo.com—the definitive home for actionable financial intelligence.