Account Closed
Am I moving too fast?
7 September 2019 | 6 replies
I have been renting out my home to extended family for the past 2 years making ALL the mistakes 1st time landlords usually make.I've kicked them out and am in the process of cleaning up the damage they've caused and renting it out to someone new.I've been thinking of buying more rental properties seeing as how I feel I can handle it.I recently found a deal on craigslist in my area...if I had to give it a grade...I'd give it a D.
Bret Rankin
Cost to separate a duplex down into 2 apartments
20 August 2019 | 7 replies
The home has everything set up for 2 apartments ie two kitchens, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 furnaces, 4 entrances and everything is above grade.
Jason Arms
Private money partnerships or wraps
4 August 2021 | 1 reply
Small fix up, paint cosmetics, build a front office space, up grade some exterior features, signage and shop equipment.
Account Closed
Fresh out of college, rent for a year or buy cheap?
24 March 2017 | 10 replies
As a student in the same boat (finishing Pharmacy school in May), I'm also looking to purchase my first property soon.
Peter Li
BP Rental Property Calculator Analysis Critique
9 February 2017 | 2 replies
.- Vacancy (5%), Repairs/Maintenance (5%), Cap Ex(10%) , Prop mangment (10%)- Annual growth (1%), Annual PV growth (1%), Annual Expense growth (1%), Sales Expenses (9%)How would you grade my Rental Report?
Sean Perinuzzi
Newbie here!
4 September 2016 | 14 replies
Still, vacancy rates are below 5%, which is pretty impressive.What "grade" neighborhood are you hoping to invest in?
N/A N/A
Ciao From Philadelphia
14 August 2007 | 6 replies
I'm a pharmacist working for a pharmacy retail store.
Kelei X.
Finding rental properties
25 April 2016 | 5 replies
Is there some sort of Zillow/Trulia type site where I can just do a search of all rental property listings and filter by area, neighborhood grade (including crime rate, school quality, job growth, population growth, vacancy rate, median household income, etc.), school quality and yield?
Jay Hinrichs
Canada Alberta Fort McMurray
1 February 2020 | 11 replies
The government will bungle payouts as it did during the last flood disaster where some well connected flood plain dwellers received up to $3 million ( yes 3 m of tax payer money) to sell their ruined house to the province, and others fought to get enough to gut and redo a basement and the government tried to say they could only compensate for the lowest grade vinyl or laminate rather than the hardwood and granite that was destroyed.