Here are the 7 Best Real Estate Books For Investing

One of the more popular Google searches today has to do with achieving financial freedom. Since real estate investing is often part of achieving financial freedom, it’s not uncommon for people to search for the best real estate books. 

The Road To Passive Income

I voraciously read books either written by or about millionaires to find out how they accomplished their wealth. Some of the books were: – The Millionaire Next Door – Think and Grow Rich – Everyday Millionaire – The Richest Man in Babylon – Secrets of the Millionaire Mind

Real Estate Is The Key

Even though the majority of millionaires achieve their wealth through real estate, that doesn’t mean you will too if you become a real estate investor. But one of the best ways to avoid failure and improve your chances of success is to learn real estate by reading books.

7 Best Real Estate Books

In the book, The Millionaire Real Estate Investor, author Gary Keller of Keller-Williams Realty interviewed over 100 millionaire real estate investors to put together a guide for building wealth through real estate.  

#1 The Millionaire Real Estate Investor

The second book on our list of best real estate books is Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad Poor Dad is the ultimate book to get you started in real estate with the right frame of mind.

#2 Rich Dad Poor Dad

For many real estate investors, “The ABCs of Real Estate Investing” by Ken McElroy is their best go-to book that teaches the basics of real estate investing. McElroy has over 26 years of senior-level experience in multifamily asset and property management. 

#3 The ABC’s of Real Estate Investing

The fourth book on our list of best real estate books is Frank Gallinelli’s What Every Real Estate Investor Needs to Know About Cash Flow, and 36 Other Key Financial Measures can help you figure it all out, especially for newbies. 

#4 What Every Real Estate Investor Needs To Know About Cash Flow

Kiyosaki claims that most people are on the left side of the “poor side” of the quadrant. They’re either employees or are self-employed. The goal of the book seems to motivate the masses to move from the left to the right side of the quadrant….and he does a pretty darn good job of it too. 

#5 The CashFlow Quadrant

Swipe up now to read the full post!