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Results (10,000+)
Ryan Dubendorfer tenant request for lease addendum
3 January 2025 | 4 replies
I am considering doing this but should I charge a fee to write up and get the lease addendum signed?
Tobi Isaacs Who can beat this HELOC?
9 January 2025 | 5 replies
It is also important to consider the transactional fees associated with originating the HELOC, whether an appraisal is required etc.
Preethi S. Difficult Property Management company
3 January 2025 | 8 replies
Understand the fees involved and calculate the total cost for an entire year of management so you can compare the different managers.
Rob Pattison Advise on how to pay my Costa Rica property manager
8 December 2024 | 8 replies
Now he tells me that paypal is restricting the amount and frequency of his withdrawals and wants me to wire him my monthly payment.   
Yael Doron Title: Looking to Invest in the Phoenix, Arizona Area - Advice Needed
14 January 2025 | 13 replies
Focus on smaller single-family homes, condos with low HOA fees, or multi-family properties in these regions, and build a reliable local team of agents, property managers, and other professionals to ensure a smooth investing experience.
Audrey X. Jerry M Feeney - e1031xchange.com, legit?
8 January 2025 | 31 replies
I had a local bank provide a 1031 without fees
Graham Lemly Financing Strategies for house I want - Hard Money, Rehab or Conventional?
4 January 2025 | 1 reply
Here is some key information:Property recently hit the market and has 2 cash offers alreadyThe seller provided a pre-inspection report, which I shared with 2 different lenders, both think it may fail conventional financing due to potential structural and electrical issues (realtor thinks it could pass conventional)Seller has 100% equity but is behind on other payments (not sure of the urgency money is needed)This is my first attempt at an “investment” property so I’m new to thisI see 3 optionsMove forward with an offer using conventional loan pre-qualification-Not as attractive of an offer to the seller-Possibility that appraiser calls out structural/electrical issues that need to be fixed before closing, effectively causing financing to fail- Best terms and fewest loan fees for meUse a rehab style loan such as ChoiceRenovation-Even less attractive than a conventional offer to seller, but less risk of failed financing if appraiser calls out issues-Slightly worse fees and interest rates compared to conventional-Lenders tell me possibly up to 60-90 days closing in some cases, with red-tape for contractor requirements and draw schedules (sounds like the most hoops to jump through during rehab)Use a hard money lender-Most attractive loan option I can give to seller so I can compete-Much higher fees and interest rate for me-need to refinance into a conventional at the end of rehab (not familiar with seasoning periods but I think this is a factor as well)Which option would you do?
Ryan Mcpherson Rent out house and bleed for a while or sell it and hemorrhage once?
16 January 2025 | 23 replies
To rent the home, I would lose about $2,500 per month (based on comparable rents in my area, property management fees, etc).Both options loose the same amount by roughly 2 years, and by this time, I still will not have built up much more equity in the home to make selling it a break even unless there is price appreciation by then.My dilemma is this: I speculate that my home will not appreciate much in the next 3-5 years due to the rapid pace of development in the surrounding area.In 5-10+ years, maybe, but by then I'll have bled $150,000 - $300,000.I have thought about this a lot and feel that I mar'-too close to the problem to see the best solution.
Becca Pariser Who is responsible for back mortgage after paperwork is signed?
10 January 2025 | 3 replies
We already paid them a pretty sizeable entry fee ($30k) to cover some of their equity and debt in another project.
Gloria C. Best zip codes for investing in Huntsville?
10 January 2025 | 11 replies
It's an estimated cash on cash return given current rental rates subtract expenses assuming 7% interest rate, 10% management fee, 5% repairs, 5% capex and other expenses like mortgage, insurance, tax. it's a estimate to tell you what properties to analyze vs ignoreyou can see the are pockets of negative returns as well as pockets of positive return. this is to supplement the data @Devin Conley provided