3 January 2025 | 8 replies
If they are VERY professional, they will have their processes in writing as verification that policies are enforced equally and fairly by their entire staff.6.

12 January 2025 | 23 replies
If you have high holding costs (financing, taxes, insurance, utilities, etc.) the longer you are holding the less money that you are makingSelling profitably - How long will it take to sell?

7 January 2025 | 8 replies
Each closing, whether multi-family or single family, is going to have some of the same costs: title insurance, attorney fees, inspection fees, appraisal fees, fees associated with financing, etc.

27 December 2024 | 34 replies
- Warrney => insurance => make money by delaying & denying claims.6) PMC - finding a good one is TOUGH!

11 January 2025 | 420 replies
That way you're not only reducing your daily balance on your principle, but you're also building equity in another investment at the same time.then, of course, there's the life insurance option...lol.You may be better refinancing, but then you have closing costs and you are forced to always make the higher payment.

31 December 2024 | 97 replies
such as by including affirmative coverage for forced removal in the loan policy.

17 January 2025 | 24 replies
So should your facilitator.4) As a trustee, you can now write a check or wire money into any investment that follows retirement plan rules (no artwork, collectibles, alcohol, insurance, etc., and no disqualified parties).

7 January 2025 | 9 replies
Here are a few things that I like about the neighborhoods in Indy compared to other states: high rent-to-home-value ratio, consistent and gradual city development, relatively low property tax and insurance cost, affordable renovation service cost.From my experience, it's possible to find deals that meet 1% rule if you invest in *turn-key* duplex or SFH here, but they are harder to find, and could potentially slow down you from scaling up.

11 January 2025 | 67 replies
Home prices are one, cost of living and relatively disaster-free weather keeps insurance costs down.You can look up the median home price for every city or metro area.

16 January 2025 | 23 replies
It's a balance of cashflow and wealth accumulation.One of the goals is to have tenants pay as much of your cost-of-ownership as possible (loans, taxes, insurance, etc.)In high-cost areas, any Class A or B property you buy will usually negative cashflow for the first 3-5 years, until rents rise enough to cover the negative cashflow + rising taxes & insurance.Investing OOS increases your risks because you may not know the market and you can't check on everything/everyone all the time.If you move forward with your buddies, HIGHLY recommend creating a solid Partnership Agreement!