Asim G.
Extra Tenant Fees charge by Phoenix Property Managers
14 January 2025 | 5 replies
While it might feel like an extra charge to tenants, these packages often provide value that indirectly benefits the property owner as well—like reduced maintenance calls or ensuring the property is better protected.In my experience managing a large portfolio of properties, these fees are becoming more common due to the thin margins in property management.
Kyle Carter
Role insurance plays
3 January 2025 | 5 replies
You should 100% have insurance because of the worst case scenarios (what if someone dies and they blame you the property owner), but it's not something you'll want to use frequently.
Kody Smith
Hello, I'm just Getting started with creative finance.
20 January 2025 | 2 replies
These are done between the buyer (you) and Seller.The situation that is most common to find these properties are in a foreclosure proceeding, or pre-foreclosure.
Sean Michael
Making Sense of San Diego Real Estate (Renting and Investing vs Buying)
5 January 2025 | 12 replies
As for your scenario, how many bedrooms would be ideal?
Tyler Kesling
Funding Your First Deal
7 January 2025 | 16 replies
Insurance is expensive, there is a lot of extra maintenance like painting or electric in common areas that don't apply as much with smaller units.
Kyler Tarr
Knob and tube wiring
23 January 2025 | 7 replies
Across the Midwest markets, this will be a common trend.
Ilia Zakharav
Convert 6 unit multifamily into condos, 1031 after
9 January 2025 | 2 replies
A scenario where you intented to hold but something came up like an unsolicited offer, higher expenses forcing a sale, change in demographics etc.
Tim Tafel
How Does Comping Software (Privy, Propwire, Propstream) Get Their Data?
15 January 2025 | 3 replies
Another common practice for nationally sparse datasets such as tax data is aggregation.
Bruce D. Kowal
The Side-Hustle Timeline: How to Build Your RE Business While Working 9-5
16 January 2025 | 1 reply
But it's YOUR money, and Real Estate, to put it mildly, is a contact sport).Month 5: Deals & Network (15-18 hours/week)Submit first offersAttend 2-3 REI events monthlyBuild social media presenceKey Goal: First offer acceptedMonth 6: Scale & Automate (15-20 hours/week)Delegate initial tasksEstablish morning/evening routinesCreate follow-up systemsKey Goal: Sustainable weekly schedule🚫 Common Pitfalls to Avoid:Overcommitting earlyNeglecting W2 responsibilitiesSkipping system creationTaking on too many mentor calls✅ Success Markers:Consistent daily actionsGrowing networkClear systemsNo work conflictsSteady deal flowMaintained energy levels👉 Action Steps This Week:Audit your current scheduleBlock 2 hours dailyChoose your power hour (morning/evening)Set 30-day milestoneGeneral Comment: obviously not everyone will follow these suggestions.
Alan Asriants
Why BRRRR is not an effective strategy today...
23 January 2025 | 21 replies
While I would have built $150,000 in equity, the cash flow simply doesn’t work.Now, let’s compare this to the market conditions when BRRRR was highly promoted (pre-2020).Interest Rate: 4.75%Monthly Payment: $3,057/monthRent: $3,600/monthIn this scenario, I’d be making over $500/month with $23,000 left in the deal, resulting in a gross 26% cash-on-cash return—an excellent deal.As you can see, rates and prices play a critical role in the viability of the BRRRR strategy.