I have graduate degrees and had a good high paying executive job, but was getting bored. Saw an ad in the paper for a SS wash. I thought that owning a wash would be something I could do after work and make extra money. It was in a "red lined" area the banks were proactively looking to lend money into to show that they weren't discriminatory. A group of large banks in the area formed a "Community Development Corp." to facilitate the loans into this area. I got into this first wash with 100% financing, I didn't even have to supply the quarters to fill the
changers. 75% from the bank and 25% from the CDC.
This wash was in a ROUGH part of town. The day I closed on it my young kids were playing in the living room with the evening news on with mom in the kitchen making dinner. She heard them say "Daddy's car wash is on the news". It sure was. A middle school kid had been killed there for his expensive sneakers and thrown in the ditch next
door. That wasn't the only body that was found there during my years of ownership.
I ran this wash for years and paid it down, took the income from it and purchased another. Took the income from my two washes and purchased another. Eventually I was making more at the washes than I was at my job and enjoyed the washes more. Quit my job and started washing "full time" My kids were still young and I needed to provide health insurance so I got a job as a school bus driver to gain access to health insurance. I got paid every two weeks. My two week pay check after the cost of health insurance was deducted was less than $10. I got up in the morning and took a bus loads of kids to school. had a 6 hour lunch when I would run all the washes, then take bus loads of kids back home in the afternoon. Did that for 10 years.
Now I'm slowly winding down, selling one wash at a time until I'm done.
Car washing has been good to me, but I'm not as enthusiastic as I once was and the washes are starting to show it. It's time to move on.