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19 August 2024 | 7 replies
(see the red circle below)
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16 August 2024 | 23 replies
This way, you will eliminate the custodian completely with its fees, red tape, etc.
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18 August 2024 | 1 reply
Quote from @George Red: A hypothetical to see how people factor costs when rolling equity forward into additional purchases.For this example assume you purchased property “A” for 100k, and put 25% down. 2 years later you sell it for 125k so you now have 50k (25k from your initial down payment + 25k in equity).
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19 August 2024 | 20 replies
@Geremy RosenbergLots of red flags but no deal breakers for me personally.
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19 August 2024 | 42 replies
Some days I know how Red feels...
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19 August 2024 | 7 replies
The rental income minus the mortgages has me in the red around $450 a month.
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19 August 2024 | 11 replies
I saw some interesting single family houses (newly constructed) in the range of 200-300K, for examle in:McAllenEdinburgSan JuanMercedesHow can I deep go into research about those cities and neibarhoods in term of demand for rentals and for sales?
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20 August 2024 | 24 replies
It’s the best choice I’ve made so far in my real estate journey because of the solid foundation you gain through off-market acquisitions, as well as the deep understanding of marketing and sales that allows me to offer better services.
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18 August 2024 | 12 replies
Any company insuring your properties without an inspection most likely has a clause buried deep in their policy allowing them to deny claims for conditions found on the property that do not meet their UW standards and they will deny you claim based on "the house should have not been insured with them anyway".Although the inspections can be annoying look at it from the other side.You pay them 1000 to 3000 a year to insure a rental property where they agree to pay out possibly hundreds of thousands of dollars if it burns down or up to 1 million if a tenant slips on a bananna peel and falls down the steps or the tenants dog bites someone and since you didn't enforce the tenant having their own renters policy to cover the dog bite the landlord's policy is paying out.The insurance company is very much like your rich uncle backing your business venture - you run the business, he takes on the financial risk from disasters, and doesn't even get a say in who lives in the property.Your rich uncle asking you to fix the steps, put up a handrail, etc which is in your and his best interest long term.Do you really want to rent out a property with a busted front step and a bad roof that is going to leak sooner than later?
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17 August 2024 | 17 replies
Too many red tape bureaucracies, local staff challenges, building management issues.