Chico Real Estate Investment Guide For 2026
A comprehensive resource for investors targeting Northern California’s premier college town — anchored by CSU Chico’s student housing demand, Camp Fire-driven supply constraints, and Enloe Medical’s healthcare employment in 2026
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In This Guide
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1. Chico Market Overview
Market Fundamentals
Chico is Northern California’s most compelling university town investment market — a city of 100,000 with an economic profile anchored by CSU Chico’s 17,000+ students, Enloe Medical Center’s 2,500+ healthcare employees, and a quality-of-life brand built on Bidwell Park, Sierra Nevada Brewing, and outdoor recreation access that draws remote workers and lifestyle migrants from the Bay Area and beyond. What makes Chico genuinely unique among Northern California markets is its post-Camp Fire supply dynamic: when the November 2018 fire destroyed Paradise and surrounding communities, Chico absorbed an estimated 20,000–27,000 displaced residents essentially overnight. The resulting housing shortage has never fully resolved, permanently elevating Chico’s baseline rental demand above pre-fire levels.
Key economic indicators:
- Population: 100,000+ city, 230,000+ Butte County
- CSU Chico Enrollment: 17,000+ students; on-campus housing covers fewer than 25%
- Top Employer: Enloe Medical Center — 2,500+ employees, Butte County’s largest
- University Employment: CSU Chico employs 1,500+ faculty and staff
- Bidwell Park: 3,670 acres — one of the largest municipal parks in the US
- Rental Vacancy: 3–5% citywide; under 2% near CSUC campus
Chico’s economy has diversified beyond its agricultural and university roots. Healthcare has grown significantly since the Camp Fire both in response to regional trauma care needs and as a function of population growth. Remote workers — particularly from the Bay Area — have discovered that Chico offers a genuinely livable lifestyle at a fraction of coastal California cost. Sierra Nevada Brewing’s large presence in Chico has anchored a thriving craft beer and food economy that supports quality commercial development and strengthens the city’s identity as a desirable place to live.
Chico’s university, healthcare, and Camp Fire-tightened housing supply create durable rental demand
2026 Economic Outlook
- CSU Chico enrollment growth continuing through planned 2030 expansion
- Enloe Medical Center campus expansion adding healthcare employment
- Paradise rebuilding progressing slowly — Chico remains primary destination for displaced families
- Remote worker migration from Bay Area and Sacramento continuing
- Downtown Chico revitalization adding commercial amenities and housing
- Agricultural sector (almonds, walnuts, olives) supporting stable county employment
The Camp Fire Factor — Understanding Chico’s Unique Supply Story
📋 What Every Chico Investor Needs to Know About the Camp Fire
The November 2018 Camp Fire was the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history. It destroyed the town of Paradise (population ~27,000) and significant portions of neighboring Concow and Magalia. The overwhelming majority of displaced residents relocated to Chico — the nearest city with services and infrastructure capable of absorbing a population surge of this magnitude.
The housing market impact was immediate and lasting:
- Vacancy rates dropped from approximately 4–5% to under 1% in 2018–2019
- Rents increased 15–25% in the first 12 months post-fire
- Home prices surged 25–40% between 2018 and 2020
- Significant permanent resettlement — many displaced families have rebuilt their lives in Chico and are not returning to Paradise
- Paradise rebuilding has been slow due to infrastructure, insurance, and regulatory challenges — the housing demand created by the fire has not been “solved” by rebuilding
For investors, this creates a specific dynamic: Chico’s prices are higher than comparable Northern California markets of similar size because demand fundamentals were permanently elevated in 2018. This is not a bubble — it reflects real, lasting population addition. The investment thesis is not “buy cheap” but rather “buy into a market with structural supply-demand imbalance that supports both rents and values.”
Historical Performance
| Period | Market Driver | Avg Annual Appreciation | Key Event |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010–2017 | University demand, post-recession recovery | 4–6% | Steady student population; Enloe Medical expanding; Sierra Nevada established |
| 2018–2020 | Camp Fire displacement shock | 18–28% | Paradise destroyed Nov 2018; 20,000+ displaced residents flood Chico housing market |
| 2020–2022 | Pandemic migration + Camp Fire lingering demand | 12–18% | Remote workers discover Chico; Bay Area migration accelerates; inventory at historic lows |
| 2023–2024 | Rate normalization, market consolidation | 2–4% | Volume declined but rental demand remained firm; student market held particularly well |
| 2025–2026 | Enrollment growth, healthcare expansion, rate stabilization | 4–6% (projected) | CSU Chico enrollment push; Enloe campus expansion; Paradise rebuilding stalls |
Chico’s long-term appreciation averages 5–7% annually when the Camp Fire surge is included. The fire event was not a speculative bubble — it was real population growth creating real demand. A $280,000 property purchased in 2016 would be worth approximately $480,000–$520,000 today, having captured both the steady university appreciation and the Camp Fire demand shock. Future appreciation should revert toward the 4–6% structural range as the post-fire surge normalizes.
Wildfire Risk Context
Chico proper has low wildfire risk — the city sits in the valley away from the hills. However, wildfire risk is real for properties in the foothills east of Chico and is an important due diligence item:
- Chico city proper: Low wildfire risk; standard insurance available at normal rates
- Foothills (Forest Ranch, Cohasset, upper Bidwell corridors): Higher risk; insurance availability has deteriorated significantly post-Camp Fire; some carriers have stopped writing policies in Butte County hill areas entirely
- Insurance due diligence: Confirm property insurability and get insurance quotes BEFORE closing on any Chico area property; this is non-negotiable given the post-Camp Fire insurance market disruption in Northern California
- Investment strategy implication: Stick to valley-floor Chico city properties for standard investment; avoid unincorporated foothills unless you have confirmed insurance coverage at acceptable cost
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2. Neighborhood Hotspots
Chico Investment Neighborhood Map
Interactive map of Chico’s investment neighborhoods. Green stars mark top hotspots, blue circles show established markets, and orange circles highlight emerging areas.
Core Investment Neighborhoods
Detailed Submarket Analysis: All Chico Neighborhoods
| Neighborhood | Price Range | Cap Rate | Growth Drivers | Best Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University District | $380K–$560K | 5.5–7.0% | Student demand, near-zero vacancy, room premium | Student room rental, buy-and-hold |
| South Chico / Chapman | $360K–$520K | 4.8–6.0% | Professional tenants, schools, CSU faculty | Professional rental, long-term hold |
| Downtown / Bidwell | $320K–$480K | 5.0–6.5% | Remote workers, revitalization, park access | Value-add, BRRRR, young professional |
| North Chico / Skyway | $380K–$580K | 4.5–5.8% | Newer construction, Camp Fire relocated families | Family rental, appreciation, low maintenance |
| Enloe Medical Area | $350K–$500K | 5.0–6.2% | Healthcare workers, travel nurses, Enloe proximity | Professional rental, furnished travel nurse |
| East Chico / Esplanade | $360K–$510K | 4.8–6.0% | Established demand, Sierra Nevada proximity, professional | Buy-and-hold, stable professional rental |
| West Chico / Affordable | $290K–$410K | 5.5–7.0% | Workforce demand, Camp Fire displaced, affordability | Cash flow, value-add, workforce housing |
Expert Insight: “The Camp Fire changed Chico permanently. People who think of this market as a sleepy college town are about 7 years behind the reality. Chico is now a city with structural housing demand from three completely separate sources — students, healthcare workers, and Camp Fire displaced residents — all competing for the same housing stock. The supply hasn’t kept up with any of them. For investors, that’s the signal. We’re advising clients to buy near campus now while they can still find properties under $500,000, because that window is closing.” — Karen Liu, Principal, Northern California Investment Advisors
3. Property Types
| Investment Goal | Best Property Type | Best Neighborhoods | Minimum Capital |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maximum Yield | Student room rental or campus duplex | University District | $95,000+ |
| Passive / Low Maintenance | Professional SFH rental | South Chico, Chapman, East Chico | $92,000+ |
| Best Cash Flow | Small multifamily or travel nurse furnished | University District, Enloe area | $120,000+ |
| Appreciation Focus | Quality SFH in desirable neighborhood | South Chico, Chapman, near campus | $90,000+ |
| Value-Add Upside | BRRRR fixer SFH or duplex | Downtown, West Chico | $100,000+ |
Don’t guess the costs. Our Complete Renovation & Remodeling Cost Guide covers 400+ pages of project-by-project breakdowns with real contractor pricing ranges.
4. Cost Analysis
Acquisition Cost Breakdown (Chico)
| Expense Item | Typical Cost | Example ($410,000 Property) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Down Payment | 25% (investment) | $102,500 | Standard investment; 20% possible with strong credit profile |
| Closing Costs | 2–3% of price | $8,200–$12,300 | Title, escrow, lender fees; standard Northern California rates |
| Wildfire Insurance Check | $150–$300 (broker consultation) | $200 | Critical: Confirm insurance availability before close; non-negotiable post-Camp Fire |
| General Inspection | $350–$600 | $475 | Check HVAC, roof, foundation; older Chico homes need careful inspection |
| Pest Inspection | $150–$300 | $225 | Required by most lenders; termite pressure in older Butte County homes |
| Initial Make-Ready | $3,000–$20,000 | $5,000–$12,000 | Student rentals need durable flooring, paint, appliances; budget realistically |
| Property Management Setup | First month + leasing fee | $1,900–$4,000 | Chico PM fees 9–11%; student rental PMs often charge slightly higher |
| Reserves (6 months) | 6 months expenses | $9,000–$14,000 | Student wear-and-tear; HVAC; roof; vacancy buffer |
| TOTAL MINIMUM ENTRY | ~31–38% of value | $127,500–$166,000 | Higher than Central Valley markets; still significantly below coastal CA |
Sample Cash Flow Analysis: Two Chico Scenarios
Scenario A — University District 4BR Student Room Rental ($420,000 purchase)
| Item | Monthly | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Rent (4 rooms × $725) | $2,900 | $34,800 | 4BR, walking distance to CSUC; room-by-room lease |
| Less Vacancy (3%) | -$87 | -$1,044 | Near-zero vacancy near campus; allows for occasional room turnover |
| Property Taxes (1.15%) | -$403 | -$4,830 | CA Prop 13 base on $420K assessed value |
| Insurance | -$145 | -$1,740 | Valley floor property; standard rates; confirm coverage before purchase |
| Property Management (10%) | -$290 | -$3,480 | Student PM specialists; slightly higher than standard residential |
| Maintenance + CapEx (10%) | -$290 | -$3,480 | Student wear-and-tear; budget 10% not 8% for shared-house use |
| Net Operating Income | $1,685 | $20,226 | Cap rate: 4.82% on $420K — solid for a Northern CA university market |
| Mortgage ($315K, 6.75%, 30yr) | -$2,042 | -$24,504 | 25% down on $420K; principal and interest |
| CASH FLOW | -$357 | -$4,278 | Near neutral; self-managed or 5BR adds to positive territory |
| Total Return (6% appreciation + equity) | ~22% | On $102,500 down; appreciation does the heavy lifting |
Scenario B — Enloe Medical Area Furnished Travel Nurse Rental ($385,000 purchase)
| Item | Monthly | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furnished Monthly Rent (travel nurse) | $3,100 | $37,200 | 3BR furnished near Enloe; 13-week travel nurse assignment |
| Less Vacancy (12% — between assignments) | -$372 | -$4,464 | Budget 2–3 weeks vacant between 13-week assignments; realistic assumption |
| Property Taxes (1.15%) | -$369 | -$4,428 | Standard California Prop 13 base rate |
| Insurance | -$140 | -$1,680 | Furnished rental policy; slightly higher than standard landlord |
| Property Management / Placement (12%) | -$372 | -$4,464 | Higher than standard — furnished management and placement requires more service |
| Maintenance + Furnishings CapEx (8%) | -$248 | -$2,976 | Furnishings replacement; professional cleaning between assignments |
| Net Operating Income | $1,599 | $19,188 | Cap rate: 4.98% on $385K; strong for a furnished rental |
| Mortgage ($288.75K, 6.75%, 30yr) | -$1,872 | -$22,464 | 25% down on $385K |
| CASH FLOW | -$273 | -$3,276 | Near neutral; better occupancy pushes toward positive; worse occupancy pushes to -$600+ |
| Total Return (5.5% appreciation + equity) | ~21% | On $96,250 down; travel nurse premium improves income vs standard rental |
Both scenarios show near-neutral to moderately negative cash flow — the honest reality for Chico with conventional financing at current rates. The investment case rests on total return: consistent appreciation driven by structural supply shortage, near-zero vacancy near campus, and income levels meaningfully above what standard long-term leasing would achieve. A small multifamily property provides the clearest path to genuine positive cash flow in Chico.
Expert Insight: “Chico is one of the few Northern California markets where a small multifamily property actually pencils with conventional financing. A duplex near campus where one unit is a room-rental student house and the other is a furnished monthly for a travel nurse or faculty member generates $5,500–$6,500/month combined. That changes the entire cash flow equation. Most investors overlook multifamily in Chico because they fixate on single-family. The duplex market here is the strongest opportunity in the city right now.” — Thomas Brennan, Northern California Investment Properties
5. Legal Framework
✅ No City Rent Control — California State Law Only
Chico has not adopted city-specific rent control ordinances. Only California’s statewide AB 1482 framework applies. Single-family homes with proper written exemption notices in the lease face no rent increase limitations. Compared to operating in Oakland, Los Angeles, or Sacramento, Chico’s regulatory environment is relatively clean and predictable. The primary legal complexity is student rental operations — the room-by-room leasing model requires specific lease structures and operational practices.
California State Regulations
- AB 1482 (Rent Cap + Just Cause): Applies to covered multi-unit properties built before January 1, 2005. Caps increases at 5% + CPI, max 10%. Just cause eviction required after 12 months. Single-family homes are exempt with proper written notice included in every lease — critical for all Chico SFH investors.
- AB 12 Security Deposit Cap (July 2024): Maximum one month’s rent for most residential properties. For student rentals, this makes parental co-signers on individual room leases even more important — your deposit protection is limited to one month’s rent per room.
- Individual Room Leases: California law treats each room lease as a separate tenancy. This is operationally favorable: if one student tenant violates their lease, you can pursue eviction of that one person without disturbing other room tenants. Document individual room conditions at move-in for each tenant separately.
- Habitability Requirements: Standard California habitability rules apply. Chico summers can be hot (95–105°F), making functional A/C practically necessary. Unlike the Central Valley, Chico has a milder climate but still requires reliable HVAC.
- Lead Paint Disclosure: Many University District properties date from pre-1978 construction; federal disclosure required at every lease signing for these properties.
Student Rental Legal Best Practices
- Parental co-signer on every room lease: With the deposit now capped at one month’s rent per room, a parental co-signer is your primary financial protection against property damage by students with no assets. Non-negotiable for the university district strategy.
- 12-month leases only: Do not offer 9-month or academic-year leases. Require 12 months. Students who want to break a lease for summer must pay two months’ rent under California law — budget this as an expected scenario, not a rare exception.
- House rules addendum: Comprehensive written house rules covering noise, guests, parking, common areas, smoking, and pets must be incorporated by reference into each room lease and signed separately.
- Move-in condition documentation: Photograph every room and every square foot of common areas at every move-in. This is your legal defense for any deposit deduction dispute at move-out — and in student housing, move-out disputes are routine.
- CSUC Off-Campus Housing Registration: Register your rental with CSU Chico’s Off-Campus Housing office — free, gives you access to the student tenant pool, and signals basic property quality standards.
Key Chico Resources
- CSUC Off-Campus Housing: csuchico.edu/housing
- Butte County Superior Court: buttecourt.ca.gov
- California DRE: dre.ca.gov
- Chico City Code Enforcement: chico.ca.us
| Regulation | Requirement | Student Rental Note | Investor Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent Cap (AB 1482) | 5% + CPI max; SFH exempt with notice | Individual room leases renew annually — include AB 1482 notice in each | Include exemption in every SFH room lease |
| Security Deposit | One month’s rent maximum per unit | One month per room = limited protection on shared house; co-signers essential | Parental co-signer on every room lease |
| Just Cause Eviction | Required after 12 months for covered properties | Students often leave at year-end naturally; just cause less common issue | Document violations; serve proper notices from day one |
| Move-in Documentation | California requires move-in checklist | Per-room documentation protects each individual deposit | Photograph every room separately at every move-in |
| Lead Paint Disclosure | Required for pre-1978 construction | Many University District homes are pre-1978; ensure disclosure signed | Check build year; use EPA form; keep signed copies |
| CSUC Housing Listing | Voluntary; landlord registry | Significant marketing advantage; free access to student tenant pool | Register all near-campus properties with CSUC Off-Campus Housing |
6. Step-by-Step Chico Investment Playbook
Choose Your Chico Strategy
Student Room Rental (University District)
Buy within walking distance of CSUC. Lease room-by-room. Accept active management intensity in exchange for the highest per-square-foot income in Chico. Requires either a Chico-based PM with student experience or willingness to self-manage.
Professional / Healthcare Rental
Buy in South Chico or near Enloe Medical. Target nurses, CSU faculty, and remote workers. Accept lower yield in exchange for dramatically simpler management and higher quality tenants who maintain properties.
Travel Nurse Furnished Monthly
Buy near Enloe Medical. Furnish professionally. List on travel nurse housing platforms (Furnished Finder, Travel Nurse Housing). Generate $2,800–$3,800/month from 13-week assignments year-round. Best income strategy in the city when consistently occupied.
Small Multifamily
Buy a duplex or triplex near campus or downtown. Combine strategies: one unit as student room rental, one as professional long-term rental. Best cash flow profile in the Chico market with diversified tenant income.
Build Your Chico Team
- Chico Investment Agent: Must have specific investor experience — should know current room rental rates by street near campus, which blocks have student demand, and how to identify duplexes in the University District before they hit the MLS. Ask for investor-specific references, not just residential transaction history.
- Student Rental Property Manager: The most critical hire in Chico. Interview specifically about: their process for parental co-signer collection, how they handle move-in documentation for individual rooms, their summer management protocol, and their relationship with the CSUC Off-Campus Housing office. Generalist PMs without specific student rental experience will cost you significantly more in wear-and-tear and dispute management.
- Travel Nurse Placement Specialist: If pursuing the Enloe Medical furnished rental strategy, find a PM or placement specialist with active relationships with hospital staffing agencies. The placement pipeline matters more than the marketing strategy for travel nurse rentals.
- Wildfire Insurance Broker: Post-Camp Fire, insurance availability in Butte County requires specialist knowledge. Find an independent broker who can access non-standard markets (Lloyd’s, surplus lines) if the standard carriers have withdrawn. Confirm coverage BEFORE you write an offer on any Chico property.
- California Real Estate Attorney: For AB 1482 exemption notices, student lease templates (must have proper room-specific addenda and house rules), and eviction guidance. One-time setup that protects the investment for years.
Pro Tip: The Chico Association of Realtors and local landlord groups connected to CSU Chico’s off-campus housing office are the fastest ways to find experienced investor-focused professionals. The Chico investor community is active and sharing-oriented — attending local meetups before buying is time well spent.
Chico-Specific Due Diligence
Physical Checks
- Wildfire insurance confirmation — get a written insurance quote from at least two carriers BEFORE submitting an offer; deal-breaker if uninsurable at reasonable cost
- Roof condition — Northern California rain; moss growth on older roofs; check for proper waterproofing
- Foundation — Chico sits in an earthquake-adjacent zone; check for settling and drainage
- HVAC — summer heat makes A/C important; less critical than Central Valley but still matters
- Electrical capacity — student houses with multiple occupants need adequate panel for modern device loads
- Pest inspection — termites and ants common in older Butte County properties
Market and Regulatory Checks
- Confirm walking distance to CSUC main gate — measure it; “near campus” marketing is subjective; anything over 15 minutes walk faces significantly more competition
- Verify current room rental rates on Facebook groups and student housing boards specific to CSUC
- Check for code violations with Chico City Code Enforcement
- Confirm AB 1482 exemption eligibility — check build date and unit count
- Verify CSUC Off-Campus Housing listing eligibility
- Research fire history of the specific parcel — some Chico-area properties have prior fire damage not disclosed in standard history
Student Rental Operations — Getting It Right
- Lease timing is everything: Start marketing rooms in January–February for August move-in. CSUC students sign early when good properties are available. Marketing in May or June means picking from whatever is left.
- Durable upgrades matter: Install LVP flooring (not hardwood or carpet) in high-traffic areas, commercial-grade fixtures, and a washer/dryer. These upgrades cost $8,000–$15,000 and save significantly more in turnover damage repairs over a 5-year hold.
- Internet is table stakes: Provide gigabit WiFi included in room rates (budget $80–$100/month). Students will not seriously consider properties that require them to self-arrange internet — practical in a room-rental house, but students won’t do it.
- Include utilities in rent: Flat utility charge per room ($120–$150/month) eliminates billing disputes and is strongly preferred by students. Pad the room rate to cover average utility cost with a small buffer.
- Summer strategy: Some CSUC students stay for summer sessions or hold their room to preserve their spot. Market actively to summer school attendees and incoming fall students in April–May. Budget for 20–30% occupancy reduction in summer if students don’t hold.
7. Financing Options for Chico
| Loan Type | Down Payment | Rate Premium | Best For | Chico Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conventional Investment | 25% | +0.5–0.75% | W-2 income, good credit | All Chico properties fall within conventional loan limits; straightforward for qualified investors |
| DSCR Loan | 25–30% | +1.5–2.5% | Self-employed investors | Student room rental gross income ($2,900/month) can approach DSCR qualification on lower-price University District properties with 30%+ down; lenders vary on how they count room rental income |
| FHA Owner-Occupant (House Hack) | 3.5% | Standard + MIP | First investment via duplex house hack | Chico duplex near campus via FHA; occupy one unit, rent the other as student room rental — near-zero net housing cost; excellent entry strategy |
| Portfolio Loan | 20–30% | +1–2% | Multiple properties | Northern California community banks familiar with Chico market; some offer portfolio products for multi-property investors |
| Hard Money / Bridge | 15–25% | 9–13% rate | BRRRR acquisitions | Downtown and West Chico BRRRR plays; renovation timeline 3–5 months; refinance into conventional at completion |
| HELOC from Primary Residence | N/A (equity draw) | Prime + 0.5–1% | Bay Area homeowners with equity | Bay Area homeowners funding Chico investments from existing equity avoid the investment property rate premium entirely; very effective strategy for high-equity primary residence owners |
Insurance Impact on Financing: Post-Camp Fire, some lenders require proof of insurance commitment before approving financing for Butte County properties. Get your insurance quote and binding commitment early in the process — before completing your appraisal order. If your preferred lender encounters issues with Butte County insurance, portfolio lenders and credit unions may have more flexible underwriting. This is not common for valley-floor Chico city properties but is a real consideration for foothills adjacent addresses.
8. Frequently Asked Questions
Knowledge Quiz: Chico Real Estate Investment
Open Quiz
5 quick questions on what you just learned about Chico investing
1) Why does the guide describe the 2018 Camp Fire as creating a “permanent demand shock” rather than a temporary one in Chico’s housing market?
Answer: B
The Camp Fire displaced 20,000–27,000 Paradise residents who fled to Chico. Paradise rebuilding has been significantly slower than projected due to insurance disputes, infrastructure restoration challenges, and regulatory complexity. A substantial portion of displaced residents have built new lives in Chico and are not returning, creating a lasting addition to the city’s population and housing demand that has not and is not expected to fully reverse.
2) What is the most important single due diligence step the guide identifies for any Chico area property purchase?
Answer: C
Post-Camp Fire, wildfire insurance availability in Butte County is the single most critical due diligence item. Some carriers have exited the market entirely. The guide states this is non-negotiable: get a written insurance quote from at least two carriers BEFORE submitting an offer. A property that cannot be insured at reasonable cost cannot be financed or held as an investment. Valley-floor Chico city properties are generally insurable, but the confirmation must happen early in the purchase process.
3) Why does the guide recommend installing LVP (luxury vinyl plank) flooring rather than hardwood or carpet in student rental properties?
Answer: A
Student tenants in shared housing generate more wear-and-tear than typical family renters — higher foot traffic, more frequent spills, heavier furniture moving. LVP flooring is water-resistant, scratch-resistant, and significantly more durable than hardwood (which shows wear) or carpet (which needs replacement every 3–5 years in high-traffic student houses). The guide notes this upgrade costs $8,000–$15,000 but saves considerably more in turnover damage repairs over a 5-year hold.
4) What is the travel nurse rental premium near Enloe Medical Center and what makes it work as an investment strategy?
Answer: D
Travel nurses at Enloe Medical work 13-week (91-day) assignments and need furnished housing near the hospital for each contract. Their agency-provided housing stipends support $2,800–$3,800/month rents for a well-furnished 2–3 bedroom unit — substantially above standard long-term rental rates for the same property. The demand is year-round (not seasonal), and with 85–90% occupancy assumption (accounting for 2–3 weeks between assignment turnovers), the strategy generates strong income with total returns comparable to student rentals.
5) Why does the guide identify small multifamily (duplex/triplex) as offering the “clearest path to genuine positive cash flow” in Chico?
Answer: B
The expert quoted in the guide explains this precisely: a duplex near campus where one unit is student room rental ($2,800–$3,200/month) and the other is a furnished travel nurse or professional rental ($2,000–$3,000/month) generates $5,500–$6,500/month combined. That combined income fundamentally changes the mortgage-to-income ratio and creates genuine positive cash flow — something very difficult to achieve with a single-unit property in Chico at current financing rates.
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Chico is a market with a story that most investors haven’t fully read yet. A growing university, a permanent supply shock from one of California’s worst disasters, an expanding healthcare sector, and a quality-of-life profile that has been quietly attracting remote workers and lifestyle migrants for years. The investment case isn’t built on cheap prices — Chico isn’t cheap anymore. It’s built on structural demand that exceeds supply across multiple tenant categories simultaneously, in a city that people genuinely choose to live in rather than settle for. For investors who understand the student rental model, the travel nurse opportunity, or the Camp Fire-driven supply dynamic, Chico rewards the research.
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