
17 December 2024 | 42 replies
It starts slapping and bouncing around wildly and more often than not, gets further away from the water as it probably thinks its being successful in getting away, have you seen that before?

14 December 2024 | 2 replies
For a partnership where you're providing all labor and the broker is funding the deal, a fair split typically ranges from 30-50% for you and 50-70% for the broker, depending on the value and complexity of your labor versus the financial risk they're taking.

15 December 2024 | 3 replies
All of that culminates to high 20% occupancy; up to mid-30s - if you are on water or if you are nearby skiing (<10min).

15 December 2024 | 6 replies
For costs, you’ll typically need to budget for title insurance (usually around 0.5%-1% of the purchase price), attorney fees (varies but can range from $500-$2,000 depending on the complexity), and closing costs (might include recording fees, escrow fees, and other admin costs—generally $500-$2,000).

16 December 2024 | 4 replies
Water and electric?

12 December 2024 | 2 replies
This sewer line runs under 2 of the other subdivided lots that were intended to have houses on them about 400' away and ties into a city main 1 block away from the houseOct 2008 - I purchase the home and everything is great, assuming all is per plan.2010 - Developer sells one of the lots that my sewer runs under to the water district for a future clean water well site.

16 December 2024 | 8 replies
I'm not familiar with Detriot, but it looks like Cleveland would make more sense in the 150k price range

19 December 2024 | 82 replies
Go with a smaller rental and you should be able to find something in that 300k to 350k price range.

17 December 2024 | 13 replies
Although instead of knowing about roofs and rehab.. land folks need to know about:Zoningwhere is the power is there internethow deep are the wells or is its an area that water is super toughDoes it perc. and or how expensive are septic systems.Wetlands Etc.Now if you target land with all city services then its just dead simple.. figure out the retail value and buy below it and do your flip..

15 December 2024 | 5 replies
Structuring your lease in this way would benefit you by 1) locking in a longer term contract to avoid turnover costs and vacancy loss; 2) it moves your lease end date out of the winter season and into spring/summer of 2026 so it can be more easily marketed and re-rented to match the seasonal demand cycle; and 3) it avoids any upset/angry tenants who may have been incorrectly assuming their rent was going to stay in the $1,200 range after their first 6-month lease term.Would love to hear any updates you have on how this one shakes out for you though!