According to the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, roughly one in four American renters spent more than half of their income on housing in 2018. House hacking — buying a property, living in it, and renting part of it out at the same time — is one response. Done well, rent covers most or all of the mortgage.
It's not as easy as it sounds. The first task is locating a property in a neighborhood that appeals to renters.
Where House Hackers Look in Baltimore
Recurring picks on real-estate-investing forums include:
- Federal Hill
- Riverside
- Fells Point
- Canton
- Upper Fells Point
- Patterson Park
- Hampden
- Brewers Hill
- Highlandtown
- Reservoir Hill
Baltimore's rental market benefits from the same demand drivers as other large cities:
- Healthcare professionals supplying a large hospital network — including residents and traveling nurses.
- Non-local students at the area's many educational institutions.
- A robust public-transportation network — Baltimore was rated one of the top 10 U.S. cities for public transit in a 2019 ranking.
Baltimore was also one of the top 20 cities for growth in high-earning renters between 2010 and 2019, according to a RENTCafe study, which also reported a 36% national average rent increase over that period.
What to Watch For
Many of the considerations are the same as a traditional rental: proximity to public transit, sufficient parking, etc. The house-hack-specific items:
- Confirm the property isn't in an HOA that prohibits non-owner occupancy.
- If the rooms are individually leased (a shared-house arrangement), prioritize accessible common areas, multiple bathrooms, and adequate bedroom storage.
- If the rental income is intended from short-term stays via VRBO or Airbnb, confirm short-term rentals are permitted in the zoning and any HOA covenants.
- Email the city planning office to find out about planned development in the neighborhood — a tip we've seen repeatedly on investor forums.
What House Hacking Can Look Like
- Multi-unit: live in one unit, rent the others.
- Single-family with extra bedrooms: live in the property and rent out the bedrooms you aren't using.
- Property with an ADU: live in the main unit and rent the accessory dwelling unit, or vice versa. The ADU should have a full bathroom, a cooking area, and a sleeping/living area. Some jurisdictions require licensing, minimum acreage, or restrict rentals to relatives only.
- Live-in fixer: rent out a unit or bedroom while completing renovations elsewhere on the property. If you live there for at least two of the five years before sale, the IRS exempts the first $250K of capital gain from tax ($500K for joint filers).
- House plus trailer: rent the house and live in a trailer on the lot, only if the lot is large enough and the local jurisdiction permits it. Baltimore County, for example, does not permit recreational vehicles to be lived in on residential lots.
Benefits
The headline benefit is rental income covering all or most of the mortgage. Beyond that:
- Learn to be a landlord while you're physically close to the property.
- Learn what distinguishes a good tenant from a lousy one.
- Keep a close eye on your tenants.
- Owner-occupant financing terms — lower down payments, more attractive rates — than non-occupant terms.
- An accelerated education in real estate.
Downsides
Living alongside your tenants is the central trade-off. Messy or noisy neighbors are no longer an abstraction. Disputes get personal: smoking is prohibited but happening anyway, and now you're both landlord and co-tenant. Some house hackers buy through an LLC and call themselves the “property manager” to stay anonymous, but this won't fully insulate you from the friction.
Conclusion
House hacking, like any real-estate strategy, has its trade-offs. If you enjoy regular company and don't crave personal space, it can be a great fit — and Baltimore offers attractive options. If privacy matters more, a traditional rental probably suits you better.
Ready to finance your next deal?
Get a rate quote in under 60 seconds — no credit pull, no obligation.