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All Forum Posts by: Dominique Walker

Dominique Walker has started 2 posts and replied 7 times.

Post: Needing advice! Inspection & Contractors

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2
Quote from @Eliott Elias:

You need to always permit your work with the city, make sure you call them out for the necessary inspections that need to take place. Don't go any further without them 

Great advice, I didn’t know that. I definitely do that, thank you so much! 

Post: Needing advice! Inspection & Contractors

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2
Quote from @Bruce Woodruff:

You already own the property, so just get 2-3 General Contractors to do a walk through and tell you what they think the SOW should be. Compare the proposals and see which one matches you idea of the work needed. Check their credentials.


 Thank you! 

Post: Needing advice! Inspection & Contractors

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2
Quote from @Olivia Radziszewski:

Hi @Dominique Walker- this is a great question! This is a personal preference, as well as your level of comfort with your contractor. I would do both. Have the inspector come through and inspect it, find the potential issues. Then, have the contractor come through and give you a quote on the scope of work! Good luck!


 Thank you!! 

Post: Needing advice! Inspection & Contractors

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2

Just starting out and have a property that needs work (drywall, flooring, etc.) the property has already been gutted (not by me) but I’m wondering if I need to hire an inspector to go through and tell me the issues with the property then hire a contractor and get a bid OR do I just need to hire the contractor and they will go through and inspect themselves then tell me how much it’ll be?? 

Post: Just Starting Out would like advice.... please

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2
Quote from @Ernest Queen:

I have 100k in cash. I plan to purchase a rental property in Rochester Ny.  Any advice?

Do your own research! Find people that know the area well like realtors, contractors, other investors if possible. Also, don’t spend it all in one place, best of luck to you!! 

Post: Reconciling Conflicting Information / Dealing with Negativity

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2
Quote from @Jewel B.:

Happy Weekend everyone,

Today I want to ask how everyone deals with contradictory information, negativity and discouragement, and naysayers.

What I mean by this is that with every market or strategy one chooses, you will find plenty of people saying it's great and plenty of people saying it's terrible. How heavily do you weigh the doomsday advice and articles in your decision making? How do you know what's real or not?

For example, looking at one market people might say great cash flow or ROI and others might say it's terrible and there's no deals around. Or with STRs some people might say they're great and others say it's oversaturated, share horror stories, say occupancy and revenue is low, and generally make it sound unappealing. And not just individuals out of the game but individuals in the game. And not just individuals but also news articles such as this recent one.

How do you settle on a market and strategy and move forward when your head is spinning with totally different information?

Thanks!

P.S. My interests are rental property investing in LTRs/MTRs/STRs, student housing and Section 8, SFHs and small MFHs, FHA househacking locally in Pennsylvania, and OOS investing in the Midwest/South/Sunbelt, particularly Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia, or North Carolina. Value adds. Clearly not all at once :)


Run the numbers yourself, if they check out and you like them continue on the path you’re going! There is negativity and people screaming “the sky is falling” everywhere, learn how to tune out the negativity and focus on what you want! Don’t let their fear and insecurities stop you. 

Post: Home equity loan or Line of credit?

Dominique WalkerPosted
  • Investor
  • Lexington, KY
  • Posts 7
  • Votes 2

Hey everyone! I’m Dominique, a 23 year old future real estate investor from a small town Kentucky. You may be wondering “how is she a ‘future’ investor and she owns four properties?” Well, these properties were actually my mothers. I lost her in February 2020 at just 20 years old. I’m the only child so they went to me and after a lot (and I mean A LOT) of thought on where I wanted to go, what I wanted to do and what in the world is a 20 year old supposed to do with four properties that knows absolutely nothing about real estate. My first instinct was to sell them, at least that’s what everyone was telling me to do. But I didn’t listen (thankfully). I held them until I figured out what was the best move for my future.


Turns out the answer was in my face the whole time. Real estate investing!! So I dug in, I started doing research, I bought books, watched podcasts, watched TikTok’s, watched YouTube videos, gained some confidence and now I’m here on the BiggerPockets forum. I realized I need to put action behind my words in order to achieve my dreams. I want to escape the “Rat Race” as Robert Kiyosaki calls it and be financially free. The issue is, I have no one around me that shares my interests in real estate. Therefore, I have no one to answer my questions! So I’m here with open ears and an open mind, ready to receive knowledge from people that have been in the game! Thank you all for reading! 

Also if you’re in my area please reach out, I’d love to hear your stories on how you got started! 

Now onto my first (of many) questions.

So I'm planning to start renovations on a property I own within the next few months and need advice/recommendations. According to two different contractors, this property needs about 20k worth of renovations done to be able to be rented out to a tenant, my original plan was to take out a home equity loan, get the work done and have a tenant pay back the loan with their rent. With the money left over, save a little then invest what is left on a down payment to another unit using an FHA loan.

Or should I just open a line of credit, get the repairs done, have my tenant pay that down and continue using the line of credit for down payments & reno on a new property? 

* I don’t live in this property and own it free and clear *