Skip to content
×
PRO
Pro Members Get Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
$0
TODAY
$69.00/month when billed monthly.
$32.50/month when billed annually.
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here
Pick markets, find deals, analyze and manage properties. Try BiggerPockets PRO.
x
All Forum Categories
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

All Forum Posts by: Nick Dunbar

Nick Dunbar has started 7 posts and replied 18 times.

Post: Mail sent to tenants

Nick DunbarPosted
  • Posts 18
  • Votes 3

@Kyle J. Super helpful and much appreciated.

Post: Mail sent to tenants

Nick DunbarPosted
  • Posts 18
  • Votes 3

This may be a total newbie question but I’ve tried to stop all mail addresses to me from going to the property, but things like property tax and a refi junk mail keeps going to them.

Does anyone have a system when they buy a new place to ensure the tenants aren’t receiving your mail?

@Chris Mason everyone wants to be sexy!

I am exploring more options with commercial. Having a hard time wrapping my mind around the risk mitigation. I’ve worked in auditing, risk management, and tax my whole career. Hard to fully understand variable rates at historically low interest rates.

How do your clients handle the their projections with variable rates?

@Jim Spatzenfeld we did quit claim the deed. The partner signed off on it. It is back in my personal name.

The answer might be as a co-borrower but I don’t know all the details of any other implications that this could affect.

How do you BRRR refinance a property bought in your name and transferred to a 50/50 equity partnership (no due on sale clause. Transfer was approved in writing)?

We didn’t do this the ideal way. Purchased conventional about 2 years ago. It was our test run into investing in real estate. Bad news, it went really well. Now we want to really ramp it up.

Townhome Property details:

Bought for 90k

Rehab 11,960

~70K left on loan.

Appraised this month for 135k.

Max loan ~102.

Cash flow after refi 187 a month after all accruals

So, the problem. Fannie Mae said you cannot take cash our due to the chain of title previously being held with an LLP. I asked if it was an LLC would it work. The Answer was only if it was a single member LLC. How can I every take equity out if this is the scenario? Are their other options I'm missing because (you know) you don't know what you don't know?

Post: Confused Investor Here

Nick DunbarPosted
  • Posts 18
  • Votes 3

I started investing 1.5 years ago.  I found a local bank that put in writing that I could buy in my personal name (to avoid closing at a higher interest rate) and transfer it to a partnership without them calling the loan due. My attorney reviewed it and agreed it was fine.  We are very happy with our process and are repeating it with the same bank on another property.  

Now to my confusion, with lower interest rates my lender said I could cash out refi to BRRRR out all my initial investment. After running the numbers we decided to leave in 5k of the initial investment (68% LTV) and the payment would drop by 35 bucks a month. So essentially very little increase to cash flow numbers while drastically increasing the overall rate of return. We are all set. The lender even set the closing date with the attorney. Well, now they called and said, "hey no problem. We will still write the loan but you can't cash out Refinance because it was previously held in a partnership." The logic makes sense. Sure I could clean out all the equity in a place by transferring it to my personal name and pulling out the equity, BUT my partners has to sign off on the transfer. So, in my mind this was all done above board.

Okay, not the end of the world, but how are other people investing with partners.  Should i just start buying properties with the partnership and take the hit on the interest rate?  How are people doing this without a bunch of snags?  I still want to get this to a much lower rate, but is there a better way to be handling the financing for a "newer" partnership. I'm clearly missing something.

Post: Experience with Nestegg

Nick DunbarPosted
  • Posts 18
  • Votes 3

@Jonathan Klemm

Right now I have one property on the system. We are basically split testing it at this point. We have used cozy previously. We are also considering moving a property to a local PM company. That way we can truly split test the experience.

Properties we own are in NC.

Thanks!

@Michael Henry

This was super helpful. The was done by last homeowner. It honestly looks very well done. High end finishing and clean work. I assume it is up to code but you just never know.

Thanks for the advice. I’ll let you know if I can get it closed!

@Gloria C.

If it is during normal hours of operation absolutely not. Occasionally it might happen if they are showing a property but otherwise answer the phone is the leading key to success as an agent!

I get annoyed when my agent starts doing what I ask but doesn't let me know they did. Like requesting a CMA or setting up a showing. I'll message back 30 minutes later and frequently get this is in process back. That bothers the heck out of me. Just say okay on it and I won't pester you!!!

@Gloria C.

If your agent isn’t meeting your expectations you should tell them. If they say you are being unreasonable start interviewing agents.