Passive income isn't a button — it's structure that pays after the work is done. Real estate flips one thing: the renter pays, the owner collects. Let me show you.
Let me tell you what passive income actually is, because the word's been sold to you wrong. It isn't a button you press to get rich while you sleep. It's structure. You do the work once — set it up right — and it pays you after the work is done. That's the whole idea. Real estate is the clearest version of it. Watch what flips. Every month, a renter hands over rent and it's gone. The owner of that same building collects that rent every month. Same house. Opposite side of the cashflow. One pays to live, one gets paid to own. That's the mechanic the 1% lean on — and it stacks. Rent comes in, the loan gets paid down by someone else, the property tends to climb over time, and the tax code rewards the owner with depreciation on top. Now the honest part, because I won't sell you a fairy tale. "Passive" is earned, not given. There's a down payment, a mortgage, repairs, vacancies, tenants. The cashflow is real, but so is the work up front and the risk if you skip the math. Average people pay rent. Owners collect it. Owners don't earn the way you earn.
*Educational only — not financial advice.*
