
6 February 2025 | 2 replies
Cash flow is definitely the biggest challenge; both in terms of finding properties to buy that cash flow with a loan on them and just company wide given interest rates and labor/material is up and, at least where I'm at in Jackson County, MO, taxes are way up too.

2 February 2025 | 14 replies
Best bet is to try local and credit unions, possibly may have some programs for better rates.

5 February 2025 | 2 replies
On a daily basis I get questions from investors/property owners about the rental rate for their rental property.

10 February 2025 | 6 replies
Occasionally I'll see properties coming on the market where the seller has a VA loan with a low interest rate.

6 February 2025 | 2 replies
@JD Martin agree 10,000%What I am surprised about is I had a call with someone in Austin today and in sw Florida and they both said things are awful and prices are dropping at high rates - curious don't hear as much chatter here about that as it could be an opportunity

8 February 2025 | 13 replies
Deduct NEW property taxes after you buyDeduct home insurance costsDeduct maintenance percentage, typically 10%Deduct vacancy+tenant nonperformance percentage(we recommend 5% for Class A, 10% Class B, 20% Class C, good luck with Class D)Deduct whatever dollar/percentage of cashflow you wantNow, what you have left over is the amount for debt service.Enter it into a mortgage calculator, with current interest rate for an investment property, to determine your maximum mortgage amount.Divide the mortgage amount by either 75% or 80%, depending on the required down payment percentage - this is your tentative price to offer.If the property needs repairs, you'll want to deduct 110%-120% of the estimated repairs from this amount.Be sure to also research the ARV and make sure it's 10-20% higher than your tentative purchase price.As long as the ARV checks out, this is the purchase price to offer.It is probably significantly below the asking price.

5 February 2025 | 18 replies
Elite’s rates are a little higher but they sound MUCH more flexible.

10 February 2025 | 3 replies
Both of these allow you to low down payment loans to buy a primary residence with fixed interest rates.

28 February 2025 | 9 replies
The downside, is you have no control over what the bank's guidelines will be in the future, or what rates will be in the next few months.

7 February 2025 | 5 replies
Based on 27.5 yr straight line depreciation, that's about $1,700 of missed annual depreciation; $25,000 over 15 years - and at an ordinary tax rate of say 30% tax could amount to $7,500 off my current tax bill.