The Scottsdale Remodel

Fix & Flip

Scottsdale, Arizona

34.1% ROI

7 Months

A dated luxury property in Scottsdale acquired $51,000 below asking, fully remodelled with premium finishes for $67,000, and sold 19 days after listing for $94,000 above the purchase price — delivering the highest single-deal return in the portfolio.

Overview

The Scottsdale Remodel is the only fix-and-flip in the Lumivest portfolio and the deal that produced the largest single capital event. Every other deal in the portfolio was acquired for long-term cash flow and held. This one was identified as a flip from day one — a dated luxury property in a high-demand Scottsdale sub-market where the gap between distressed value and fully-renovated value was wide enough to justify the short-term capital deployment and tax implications of a sale.

The Numbers

Purchase price: $448,000. Original asking price: $499,000. Days on market before offer: 71. Renovation cost: $67,000. Carrying costs over 7 months (mortgage, insurance, utilities, HOA): $21,400. Total investment: $536,400. Sale price: $594,000. Gross profit before tax: $57,600. Net profit after all costs: $57,600. ROI on capital deployed: 34.1% over 7 months — annualised at approximately 58%.

The Strategy

The Scottsdale luxury market has a specific characteristic that makes certain fix-and-flip opportunities highly attractive: buyers in the $550,000–$700,000 price range in this market are almost exclusively purchasing on emotion, not spreadsheets. They are buying a lifestyle, not an investment. A property that photographs beautifully and shows impeccably will consistently command a 15–25% premium over a property with identical square footage and location that shows poorly. The strategy was to acquire a structurally sound property that showed poorly due to dated finishes, apply a targeted renovation focused entirely on visual and experiential upgrades, and sell to an emotionally motivated buyer within 90 days of completion.

The Execution

The property was a 2,800 square foot single-storey home built in 2004. Structure was excellent — no foundation, roof, or mechanical issues. The problems were entirely cosmetic: original Saltillo tile throughout, dark wood cabinetry in the kitchen and bathrooms, a popcorn ceiling in the main living area, and a backyard that had not been touched since construction. Everything that a luxury buyer in 2024 would see and reject immediately.

Renovation scope was deliberately targeted. No structural changes. The $67,000 budget covered: full LVP flooring replacement over the Saltillo tile, complete kitchen cabinet repaint with new hardware and quartz countertops, all three bathrooms retiled with large-format porcelain, popcorn ceiling removal and smooth plaster finish in the main living area, exterior repaint, and a full backyard redesign including new desert landscaping and a covered outdoor dining area. Work was completed in 19 weeks — one week ahead of schedule.

Professional staging was brought in for the photography session — $3,800 for a 4-week staging rental. Listing photography produced 68 images and a video walkthrough. The property was listed at $594,000. First showing was within 4 hours of going live. Full-price offer received on day 3. Offer accepted. Closed on day 19 from listing date.

The Outcome

Sale price: $594,000. Total profit after all costs and fees: $57,600. ROI: 34.1%. Time from purchase to close of sale: 7 months. The Scottsdale flip funded the down payments for two simultaneous acquisitions in the following quarter — accelerating the portfolio expansion timeline by approximately 8 months compared to organic cash flow accumulation.

The Lesson

In the luxury market, presentation is the product. The renovation budget was not spent on structural improvements that add functional value — it was spent entirely on visual and experiential upgrades that trigger emotional buying decisions. Every dollar of the $67,000 renovation was evaluated against one question: will this make the property photograph better and show better to a $590,000 buyer? Nothing else mattered. The backyard redesign alone — $11,000 of the budget — likely contributed $25,000+ to the sale price because it transformed the outdoor space from an afterthought to a feature that appeared in 14 of the 68 listing photos.

What I Would Do Differently

List at $619,000 rather than $594,000. The full-price offer on day 3 with no negotiation is the clearest possible signal that the property was underpriced. A $25,000 higher list price with the same quality of presentation would very likely have resulted in a sale in the $600,000–$615,000 range — an additional $6,000–$21,000 in net profit on the same investment. In luxury markets with strong demand, pricing at the top of the defensible range and allowing negotiation is almost always preferable to pricing conservatively and leaving money on the table.

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