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6420 Tuxedo St
B+ Composite 77.46
Why this score? — see what drove the B+ grade

The composite is a weighted blend of 9 inputs, each scored 0–100. Each bar is that input's sub-score; the figure is the points it added to the 100-point composite (weight × sub-score).

  • Cash flow +30.0/30.0
  • 1% rule +10.0/10.0
  • DSCR +10.0/10.0
  • Appreciation +10.0/10.0
  • ARV discount +7.5/15.0
  • Livability +3.7/5.0
  • Rent growth +2.5/5.0
  • Condition / age +2.5/5.0
  • Schools +1.3/10.0

$90,000

6420 Tuxedo St · Detroit, MI 48204
8 bd · 4.0 ba · 3,816 sqft · Townhouse public records · 172 Days on market
Built 1924 4,792 sqft lot $24/sqft · 58% below area

🖨 Deal sheet (PDF) 📄 Offer letter ✓ Due diligence

Listing remarks MLS

Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments—ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit’s Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

Key facts

  • Multi-family home
  • 4,792 sq ft lot
  • Built 1924

Tags

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITYMULTI-FAMILY HOMESTRONG CASH-FLOW POTENTIALREVITALIZING NEIGHBORHOOD

Neighborhood map

Property Rental comp Retail Transit Schools Stadiums Fortune 500 · Circle radius: 3.0 mi
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What this means for you Summary

Snapshot

  • This is a 8-bed/4.0-bath townhouse listed at $90k.

Deal economics

  • At list price, monthly cash flow is $714 ($9k/yr) — positive.
  • The deal already cash-flows at list — no discount required.
  • Meets the 1% rule at list price ($2k rent vs $90k).
  • Recommended offer: $79k (12.0% below list) — sets the bar for market timing.
  • Cap rate 15.8% vs local median 10.0% in Detroit — top-decile yield for the area; either an underpriced asset or a hidden risk that comps aren't pricing in. Stress-test before assuming the spread holds.

Location & tenants

  • Location reads 73/100 on livability (#218 in MI) — a middle-class / working-renter tenant base. Strengths: amenities A+, commute A+, cost of living A+; Watch: crime F, employment F.
  • Detroit Public Schools Community District (urban): math 10% / reading 24% proficiency, ranked #499 of 540 in MI (top 92%) — low school quality limits family demand, transient renter base, plan for 1-2y turnover; 90% free/reduced lunch — lower-income household profile, screen leases tightly.
  • Zoned schools: Durfee Elementarymiddle School (593 students, 91% FRL); Central High School (math 24% / reading 24%, grade F, #481 of 713 statewide, top 81%, 353 students, 89% FRL) — zoned schools at 90% FRL track the district average.
  • Market conditions: 248 active listings in the ZIP; lower-income renter base — watch delinquency; 2,639 units permitted in Wayne County in 2024 (1,216 in 5+ unit buildings).
  • At $1,585/mo this rent would consume 55% of the median local household income ($34k/yr) (locally 1418% of renters already pay >50% of income on rent) — very limited rent-growth headroom before tenants either downsize or default.

Forward outlook

  • In year one you build about $10k of equity ($622 loan paydown + $9k appreciation (10.0% local appreciation)).
  • Wayne County population projected at -17% by 2050 — secular population decline; favor cash flow + early exit over multi-decade hold.
  • At projected returns (10.0% appreciation + 3.0% rent growth), your $25k cash investment doubles in ~2 years — after that, you're playing with house money.
  • By year 4, paydown + projected appreciation supports a ~$34k cash-out refi (75% LTV) — recoverable capital for the next deal without selling this one.

Negotiation context

  • It's been on market 172 days — a 12% lower offer ($79k) is reasonable based on typical stale-listing flexibility.
  • 2 sale attempts; this cycle's ask is 12% above the opening price — seller raised mid-cycle; expect resistance to lowballs.

Risks & watch-outs

  • Watch-outs: built in 1924 — expect roof / HVAC / electrical / plumbing capex.
Recommended offer $79,200 (12.0% below list)

Questions for the listing agent

  1. It's been on market 172 days. Have you received any prior offers? Is the seller open to a 12% concession, seller financing, or rate buy-down credit?
  2. Built in 1924 — when were the roof, HVAC, electrical panel, plumbing, and water heater last replaced?
  3. Why hasn't it sold? Are there any deal-killer items the seller is aware of (foundation, flood, title, zoning, code violations)?
  4. Is there a deadline driving the sale (1031 exchange, divorce, estate, relocation)? That informs how much negotiation room exists.
  5. Schools are F-rated, which usually means shorter tenancies and higher turnover. Who's the typical renter profile here, and what's been the actual vacancy rate?
  6. Crime grade is F in this area — have there been break-ins, vandalism, or insurance claims at this property in the last 3 years? What carrier currently insures it and at what premium?
  7. What's the average days-on-market for RENTAL listings here right now (not sales)? A rising rental-DOM trend means longer vacancies and softer asking-rent achievability than the comps imply.
  8. What's the recent tenant-quality profile in this submarket — average credit score on applications, eviction rate, late-payment / NSF rate, and stable-employment percentage? A property-management company in the area should have these aggregated.
  9. How much new for-sale + rental construction is in the pipeline within 1–3 miles? Heavy new supply typically softens prices + rents 12–24 months out; constrained supply supports both.

Investment metrics

1% rule
1.76%
Cap rate
15.82%
Cash-on-cash
34.02%
DSCR
2.51
GRM
4.7

CMA / ARV

ARV (median comp)
$271,721
List price
$90,000
Delta
-66.88%
Verdict
UNDERPRICED
Comps
10 within 1.0 mi

Projected returns pro-forma

10.0% appreciation · 3.0% rent growth · sell at horizon

5-year hold
IRR
50.3%
Equity multiple
4.75×
Total profit
$94,490
Equity at exit
$81,079
10-year hold
IRR
44.0%
Equity multiple
10.62×
Total profit
$242,421
Equity at exit
$174,850

Cash invested: $25,200 (down + closing). Projections, not guarantees.

Landlord ↔ Tenant lean methodology

Overall (STATE)
62 Landlord-Friendly
State Michigan
62 Landlord-Friendly · EVEN
County
— inherits STATE
City
— inherits STATE
7-day pay-or-quit; mixed climate; Detroit/AA have some protections.

ZIP-level market 48204

Home prices YoY
18.5%
Active inventory
248
Price-to-rent
4.7×

Monthly cashflow live

Estimated rent
$1,585 medium interval (Pro) →
Mortgage (P&I)
$472
Tax from tax record
$28 /mo · $340/yr
Insurance
$38
HOA
$0
Vacancy / Maint / Mgmt
$333
Net cashflow
$714

Break-even live

Break-even rent $681
Max offer price $90,000
Occupancy floor 50%

Sensitivity live

Price -10% $765 -5% $740 +0% $714 +5% $689 +10% $663
Rent -10% $589 -5% $652 +0% $714 +5% $777 +10% $840
Rate -1.0pp $760 -0.5pp $737 base $714 +0.5pp $691 +1.0pp $667

UW: 25.0% down · 7.5% · 30yr · 1.5% tax · 5.0% vac · 8.0% maint · 8.0% mgmt

Financing live

Cash to close

Down payment
$22,500
Closing costs
$2,700
Reserves months
Total cash needed

Loan-product check · same deal, 3 products live

Conventional

25% down · 7.5% · 30yr

Down + closing
Monthly P&I
Monthly cashflow
DSCR
Eligible?

Personal DTI + credit; lowest rate.

DSCR

20% down · 8.5% · 30yr

Down + closing
Monthly P&I
Monthly cashflow
DSCR
Eligible?

No personal income docs; deal must DSCR.

Hard money

10% down · 12.0% · 12mo

Down + closing
Monthly P&I
Monthly cashflow
DSCR
Eligible?

Short-term bridge; refi at stabilization.

Listing history 6 events

  1. 2026-05-11
    status Pending 1934-char remark
    Show marketing remark (1924 chars)

    Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments - ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit's Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

  2. 2026-05-11
    status Pending 1924-char remark
    Show marketing remark (1924 chars)

    Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments - ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit's Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

  3. 2025-11-25
    price $90,000 1924-char remark
    Show marketing remark (1924 chars)

    Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments - ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit's Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

  4. 2025-11-24
    price $90,000 1934-char remark
    Show marketing remark (1934 chars)

    Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments—ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit’s Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

  5. 2025-11-20
    listed $80,000 Active 1934-char remark
    Show marketing remark (1924 chars)

    Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments - ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit's Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

  6. 2025-11-20
    listed $80,000 Active 1924-char remark
    Show marketing remark (1924 chars)

    Discover an incredible investment opportunity at 6420 Tuxedo St, Detroit, MI. This 1924 multi-family home offers four units, each with one bathroom, and strong cash-flow potential once renovated. The property retains classic architectural character and is ready for your value-add vision. Zoned R3 Low-Density Residential, this district supports single-family, two-family, townhome, multi-family, and garden-style apartment developments - ideal for long-term growth or a full-scale renovation project in a revitalizing neighborhood. Interested buyers should consult the proposal guidelines for new build opportunities. The DLBA also recommends reviewing relevant Neighborhood Framework Plans from the City of Detroit's Planning and Development Department for additional context about the neighborhood. To submit a complete DLBA proposal, include buyer information (name, contact, entity, and purchase price including renovation costs), note any previous DLBA purchases, provide a renovation budget, timeline, and financing plan (proof of funds and lender pre-approval if applicable), and outline your renovation experience, contractor details, and post-renovation plans (sell or rent). Optional materials such as letters of support, community involvement, or CRIO certification can strengthen your application. Proposals are evaluated on price, feasibility, experience, financial capacity, and community impact. Please note that the DLBA is entitled to a tax capture for the 5 tax years subsequent to transferring ownership of the property. The tax capture may be incompatible with tax abatement that are otherwise available to the selected purchaser. DLBA will review requests to waive its tax capture rights and may require a payment in lieu of taxes to approve such requests. The payment will be determined upon reviewing the development proforma and effect of any tax abatement on the purchase and development financing.

ⓘ Source: listings_history table (triggers on properties + properties_extension) + one-shot backfill from property_details.listing_events for pre-trigger history.

Tax reassessment forecast MI · Partial reset (capped growth)

Current annual tax
$340 · $28/mo
Projected year-2 tax
$863 · $72/mo
Expected delta
+$523/yr (+$44/mo · 153.8%)

ⓘ Screening estimate from a state-policy table — verify with the county assessor before closing.

Climate risk First Street

  • 🌊 Flood 4/10 Moderate FEMA zone X (unshaded) · 20% chance over 30 yrs
  • 🔥 Wildfire 1/10 Low
  • 🌡 Heat 3/10 Moderate 7 d/yr ≥97°F today · 15 d/yr by 30 yrs out
  • 💨 Wind 2/10 Low
  • 🫁 Air quality 4/10 Moderate 4 unhealthy d/yr today · 6 by 30 yrs out

Nearby sold comps map

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Walkable amenities ~0.75 mi

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Taxation est. · year 1

Rental income
$19,021
− Mortgage interest
−$5,041
− Property taxes
−$340
− Insurance
−$450
− Repairs & maintenance
−$1,522
− Management
−$1,522
− Depreciation
−$2,618
Taxable income
$7,528
combined federal + state — saved on this device
Est. tax owed @ 24.0%
−$1,807
After-tax cash flow
$6,766/yr

For passive investors: Depreciation is non-cash, so a rental often shows a tax loss while cash-flowing — sheltering income. Rental losses are passive: they offset passive income freely, and up to $25,000/yr can offset ordinary (W-2) income if you actively participate and your MAGI is under $100k (phasing out to $0 by $150k); unused losses carry forward. On sale, claimed depreciation is recaptured at up to 25%, and gains may owe capital-gains tax (a 1031 exchange can defer both). Figures are a year-1 estimate at your 24.0% rate — not tax advice; consult a CPA.

Schools (NCES district)

District
Detroit Public Schools Community District
NCES district ID
2601103
Math proficiency
10% ▼ -2.00%
Reading proficiency
24% ▲ 6.00%
Median HH income
$25,815
Composite
13.06/100
National rank
#9564
State rank
#499 of 540 in MI

Livability — Detroit

Score
73/100
State rank
#218
US rank
#5427

Category grades

Amenities A+ Commute A+ Cost of living A+ Crime F Employment F Housing A+ Health & safety B- User ratings F

Schools grade is shown separately in the Schools card above.

Census & demographics

Census place
Detroit, MI
County
Wayne County · 1,562,939 people
City population
572,865
Metro
Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI
Population (ZIP)
20,696
Household income
$34,468
Rent vs Own
45.0% rent · 55.0% own
Severe rent burden
1418.0

Population outlook (Wayne County) Hauer SSP2

Today (2025)
1,675,273 people
By 2030
1,620,300 · -3.3%
By 2040
1,502,341 · -10.3%
By 2050
1,384,039 · -17.4%
By 2075
1,124,592 · -32.9%
By 2100
881,193 · -47.4%

Race, ethnicity, and origin ACS 2023

Neighborhood character
Predominantly Black (86%)
Race & ethnicity
Black 86% Two or more races 7% Hispanic / Latino 5% White 4% Native American 2%
Hispanic origin (detail)
Mexican 4%
Common ancestry
Hispanic 1% Romanian 1%
Foreign-born
2% · Canada
Languages at home
95% English-only · Spanish 4%

Political lean MEDSL · Wayne

2024 margin
Strong D (+29.0) · D 62.7% · R 33.7% · Other 3.6%
2008→2024 swing
-20.5pp toward R · 2008: 49.5pp · 2024: 29.0pp
All cycles
2024: D+29.0 2020: D+38.1 2016: D+37.3 2012: D+46.9 2008: D+49.5

Not yet ingested

Civics

Market trends

HPI YoY
▲ 36.51%
Current HPI
234.0465
Rent YoY
Metro
Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI
State GDP YoY
▲ 1.37%
F500 in state
28

Industry mix (Fortune 500 HQ in MI)

Industry F500 HQs Revenue

Price history

+12.5% since first listed
6 events — show timeline
  • 2026-05-11 Pending REALCOMP
  • 2026-05-11 Pending MiRealSource-MiMLS
  • 2025-11-25 Price Changed $90,000 MiRealSource-MiMLS
  • 2025-11-24 Price Changed $90,000 REALCOMP
  • 2025-11-20 Listed $80,000 REALCOMP
  • 2025-11-20 Listed $80,000 MiRealSource-MiMLS

Property tax history

-8.0%/yr

Latest (2016): $340 · -15.2% YoY. Source: county tax records.

Cash-flow waterfall

monthly

Sold comps — $/sqft

last 12 mo · ≤1 mi

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