Kevin Rea
Of all the places you lived, where would you move to right now
11 January 2022 | 253 replies
We have snowboarding/skiing, boating, Mountain biking, rock climbing, canyoneering, kiteboarding and paragliding, dirtbiking, off-roading and the list goes on.
Shrikar A.
Top growing cities/metro areas in last 4 years
17 October 2019 | 10 replies
Would love to hear from the community as to which area they would pick for rental property investment.And instead of population growth if you just look at the percentage change in population you get a different set of cities but some cities are common and probably of interest to me.Looks like Boise City, ID, Daphne-Fairhope-Foley, AL, Midland TX, Provo-Orem, UT seems good on both metrics #datadriveninsights.
Account Closed
How do I find and properly vet an Architect in my area?
26 September 2018 | 3 replies
I'd like to explore building a STR on a lot I own near Canyon Lake in Texas and have a good example from another house I found online to mimic.
Jared Garfield
If I Were Starting Today: This Is What I Would Do Differently!
10 June 2016 | 21 replies
As a kid I spent a lot of time in my Grandfather's real estate office on Center Street in Provo, UT.
N/A N/A
Where is the market for raw land hot?
3 July 2007 | 23 replies
We live in Spanish Fork Utah.Just south of Provo.
Matthew Foster
Newbie from Caldwell Idaho
28 December 2014 | 10 replies
Curious where you are looking to invest - whether it be Canyon or Ada County.
ERIC E
anyone getting BOA approvals on their short sales?
8 January 2010 | 80 replies
Turn key in Canyon Lake, CA.
David Cheng
Need help with 1031 options
7 November 2022 | 10 replies
Canyon County (Nampa and Caldwell) still have room to grow, they are becoming the exit strategy for those that are tired of the infrastructure lags of Ada county (Boise,Meridian etc).
William C.
The market downturn is here, at least in my market. Anyone else?
8 June 2019 | 182 replies
Helena, American Canyon, etc.??
Adam Vargas
Big Bear/ Lake Arrowhead fire risk?
20 June 2022 | 19 replies
Fire is a risk in the mountains absolutely, but a lot of the risk can be mitigated by what they call “defensible space,” the specific location of the house in relation to canyons and drainages and open space, and of course building construction.