Colorado School of Mines · Investment Strategy

Skip the Dorms.
Own the Window.

New housing policies at Mines changed everything. The first two years are now on-campus. That compressed the off-campus opportunity — and made junior & senior year the most investable 24 months in college real estate.

~80%
Potential ROI
in 2 years
2yr
The Wealth
Window
$50K+
Projected
Equity Gain

Most Buyers Haven't
Adjusted Yet

In March 2024, Mines formalized a 2-year on-campus housing requirement. The off-campus window didn't disappear — it just moved.

Before the Policy
Parents bought for freshman year. The strategy was simple: 4-year house-hack with immediate occupancy. Sophomores were your sweet spot tenant.
After the Policy
Freshmen and sophomores are required to live on campus. That removes a chunk of off-campus demand — but it also means the students who do enter the off-campus market are older, more stable, and easier to work with. The opportunity is more focused, not gone.
"The policy didn't kill the strategy. It professionalizes it."
— The College Wealth Window™ Framework

The 800 new on-campus beds are earmarked specifically for freshmen and sophomores. That redirects demand — upperclassmen still need off-campus housing, and the inventory of quality properties near campus hasn't grown. The result is a more predictable, concentrated demand pool in Years 3 and 4. That's the window most buyers are missing.

Buy for the Right Two Years

The strategy is simple: stop fighting the policy and start aligning with it. Buy during sophomore year. Move in junior year. Capture the highest-demand 24 months in student housing.

1
Year One
Freshman Year
On-campus required. Focus on finding the right property.
2
Year Two
Sophomore Year
Still on-campus. Best time to buy before competition arrives.
3
Year Three
Junior Year
Move in. Rent extra rooms. The wealth window opens.
Window Opens 🔥
4
Year Four
Senior Year
Full occupancy. Strong exit. Sell or hold.
Maximum ROI

Why the Final 2 Years
Perform Better

01
Better Tenants
Juniors and seniors are more independent, more financially stable, and less likely to cause damage. They've outgrown the freshman experience and want something closer to real life.
02
Higher Willingness to Pay
Upperclassmen are done with dorms. They value privacy, parking, and space — and they (or their parents) will pay a premium for a well-configured property near campus.
03
Predictable Demand Window
The policy creates a reliable 2-year off-campus window for every student at Mines. You know exactly when your tenants need housing — and for how long. That predictability makes planning and occupancy far more manageable.
04
Cleaner Exit Story
You're not selling to a panicked freshman parent. Your buyers are investors, strategy-minded families, or traditional homeowners — all higher-quality conversations.

What a 2-Year Hold Can Look Like

This is a realistic model — not a best-case fantasy. The real return isn't just appreciation. It's the cost of housing your student offset by real rental income.

Sample Property Model

Purchase Price
$650,000
Down Payment (10%)
$65,000
Loan Amount
$585,000
Est. Rate
~6.5%
Monthly PITI
~$4,400
4 Roommates @ $1,050
$4,200/mo
Net Monthly Carry
~$200
~$40K
Appreciation gain at 3% annually over 2-year hold
~$12K
Principal paydown over 24 months
~$52K
Total projected gain on ~$65K invested
~80%
Return on invested capital in 2 years — plus the cost of your student's housing was covered

These projections are illustrative and based on conservative assumptions. Actual results will vary based on market conditions, property specifics, and financing. This is not financial advice.

What Makes a Good Investment Near Mines

Not every house near campus is a good investment. The right property has specific characteristics — and most buyers don't know what to look for.

📍
Proximity to Campus
Within 3–5 miles of Mines. Properties that fit the 4+ bedroom profile under $750K are scarce within a mile — expanding the radius opens up significantly more inventory without meaningfully hurting tenant demand.
🛏
Bedroom Count
4–5 bedrooms minimum, or strong potential to add rooms. The rent-by-the-room math only works at scale.
🚗
Parking
3+ off-street spots. In Golden, parking is a dealbreaker for upperclassmen tenants. Don't overlook it.
🏗
Basement Potential
Unfinished basements are hidden value. An added bedroom or second living space changes the rent model entirely.
🏘
No Restrictive HOA
HOA restrictions can kill rent-by-the-room strategies. We screen for this upfront before you fall in love with a property.
💰
Price Sweet Spot
The optimal range is $550K–$750K. At this price point, the 4+ bedroom profile becomes realistic once you expand beyond the immediate campus area — which is exactly where the value is.

Two Types of Buyers.
Both Valid.

Not every family is optimizing for ROI — and that's completely fine. Here's how to know which approach fits your situation.

The Investor Play
4–5 Bedrooms.
Rent covers the mortgage.
The full strategy. 4–5 bedrooms, rent-by-the-room, roommates offset most or all of the carrying cost. Your student lives essentially for free while you build equity. This is the model the numbers in this guide are built around.
Best for: families who want the investment to carry itself
The Lifestyle Play
3 Bedrooms.
Better place, some upside.
A 3-bedroom won't generate enough rent to cover the mortgage — but that's not always the goal. Some parents simply want a nicer, safer place for their student than whatever's available to rent. One roommate helps offset costs, you build equity over 2 years, and the exit is often easier since 3BR properties appeal to a broader pool of buyers.
Best for: families prioritizing quality of living over cash flow
The honest truth: If you're going into it with eyes open and the budget to handle a monthly gap, the 3-bedroom can absolutely make sense. It's not the pure investment play — but real estate rarely needs to be all-or-nothing to be worth doing.

What Most Buyers
Get Wrong

Buying during freshman year
You're carrying costs for 2 years before the rental income arrives. The policy made this even more expensive than it used to be.
Overpaying for "nice" turnkey homes
Pretty kitchens don't generate rent. Bedroom count and location do. Value-add properties almost always outperform move-in ready ones.
Ignoring rent-by-the-room strategy
Renting the whole house to one family generates a fraction of the income. The math only works room-by-room.
Not planning the exit before you buy
Who's your buyer in 2 years? If you can't answer that, you're speculating — not investing. We plan the exit at the start.

This Isn't Just
Buying a House

It's structuring a deal. There's a meaningful difference — and it's why working with someone who thinks like an investor matters more than working with a typical agent.

Active real estate investor, not just a licensed agent
Deep experience with rent-by-the-room structures
Value-add renovation strategy built into every buy
Creative financing: HELOC, low-down, co-sign structures
Specific expertise in the Golden + Mines market

Investor Mindset.
Real-World Experience.

Most real estate agents will help you find a house near Mines. I help you structure a deal. There's a significant difference — and it shows up in the quality of the outcome.

I'm an active real estate investor with hands-on experience in rent-by-the-room strategies, value-add renovations, and creative financing structures. The Golden and Mines market is one I know deeply — not just from the listings, but from the investing side.

The College Wealth Window framework came out of watching the policy shift unfold — and realizing that most buyers and agents hadn't adjusted their thinking yet. This is that adjustment.

Brokerage
Kentwood Real Estate
Specialty
Investment Strategy
Market
Golden + Greater Denver
Approach
Investor-First Mindset
Brendan was an absolute pro. Keeping calm, finding solutions and getting us a great deal. We look forward to working with him again!
Anthony & Darla R.
Kentwood Real Estate Clients

Let's Build Your
2-Year Plan

Whether you're a parent thinking ahead or an investor looking for structural demand — the conversation starts here.