Ex-train driver’s $20m property empire

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Real estate mogul Daniel Walsh has come a long way from earning $250 a week as an apprentice mechanic and driving trains full of garbage.

The then-15-year-old spent the next few years scrimping and saving every single cent he could to put together a modest deposit to fund his first real estate investment.

From that suburban house, Mr Walsh has built a mammoth portfolio comprising 15 properties in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth, worth a staggering $20 million.

From an apprentice mechanic to a train driver, and now a property mogul.

Unlike many success stories about young people and bricks and mortar, this one doesn’t involve a generous cash gift from family.

Instead, he credits a strict work ethic inherited from his mum and dad, a lot of personal sacrifice, and keeping his eyes on a clear goal.

“For a long time, I wasn’t interested in instant gratification,” Mr Walsh, now 33, said.

“Everything was about sacrificing what I could to save money. I knew life would be good one day if I did the hard yards.”

From little things big things grow

As an apprentice, his take-home pay grew each year as he advanced through his training, but it wasn’t quick enough for the youngster.

“I worked on Saturdays, I did jobs in the [workshop] after hours for bits of extra cash – rebuild a starter motor and that sort of thing,” Mr Walsh recalled.

With a deposit of $35,000, he bought a plot of land in Picton, southwest of Sydney, and built a house on it.

That first house in Picton.

There was no stamp duty because it was a new construction, and he managed to mortgage it with a 95 per cent loan-to-value ratio.

Things were tight and it was a “hard slog” that required further sacrifices, he admitted.

“I kept running short of money towards the end of the build. I sold my car at one point and bought an old Daihatsu Feroza off the side of the road for $1500.

“I kept that car for a long time, but it blew up twice. I rebuilt the head of the engine twice. After that, I got rid of it. I upgraded to a Kia Rio.

“I was into skydiving at the time so I sold all my equipment for about $3000 to be able to finish off the driveway so I could rent the house.”

Daniel’s humble Kia Rio is long gone.

When completed and leased, the house was worth considerably more than the initial outlay.

Mr Walsh tapped into the equity to buy a second piece of real estate – a mortgagee in possession property just down the road.

“I renovated it, doing the work myself, then rented it out,” he said.

After that, he sat tight for a few years to wait for more equity to grow and to save some money.

“Equity was a big part of it but I also kept saving money like crazy so I wasn’t too over-leveraged,” he said.

He formed a carpool with mates from TAFE, where they took turns shuttling each other around for a month at a time, to save cash on petrol.

He barely drank when he went out, didn’t buy lunch or coffee, and when he eventually moved out of home, it was into a garage…

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