
26 July 2024 | 5 replies
With that in hand, we close on the house, immediately re-list (avg DOM 30 in the neighborhood), sell that to pay off the loan and sell the shovel-ready lot in 2-3 months when the building permit comes in.

25 July 2024 | 14 replies
Really you'd need a plans, approve those plans for a permit and to get the work done of course.

26 July 2024 | 14 replies
I'd do it as an STR, that way when permits/regulations come in you can be grandfathered in.

24 July 2024 | 6 replies
There are many more of this type of property in Durham as older homes with basements are still price accessible.To make it a "legal" or permitted duplex, the process is definitely cost and permit intensive, and in most cases may require you to use a GC or similarly licensed tradesman for parts of the project.

25 July 2024 | 5 replies
For me to go through the due diligence myself and then if I did buy the property going through the zoning and permitting process probably takes more time than I would want to take and would rather deploy my capital elsewhere.

25 July 2024 | 20 replies
Did you get permits for everything and did the building inspector sign off on everything?

24 July 2024 | 14 replies
As of 2022, zoning no longer permits new Airbnb’s in most zones - Fees upon fees upon fees: The STR hotel tax is no joke.

25 July 2024 | 62 replies
Policies like rent control, zoning restrictions, high taxes, lengthy permitting processes, and more reduce housing supply.

24 July 2024 | 22 replies
Live-in rehab definitely sounds appealing with the cost savings, but you're right - my family situation prioritizes stable housing right now, so it wouldn't be the best fit.Tahoe STR: Thanks for the reminder about permits!