
19 June 2024 | 11 replies
Ultimately, does anyone really ever set out to do real estate as a minor part of their life's ambitions and succeed in it as a side hustle that they spend a carefully limited amount of their time and energy on?

22 June 2024 | 129 replies
I still think this is what's bound to happen ultimately.

19 June 2024 | 2 replies
I had a WIDE range of quotes for my building, but I ultimately winded up using Hemlane for the quote as they had the best price and coverage.

19 June 2024 | 42 replies
However, if this is during an economic downturn when default would likely happen, there might be no equity in the house for the original seller, and I can't see how a seller would be comfortable being ultimately responsible for a mortgage that might last 20-30 years.

19 June 2024 | 13 replies
Of course, it ultimately depends on your available funds, short/long-term goals, etc.

18 June 2024 | 2 replies
My ultimate goal is of course make a bigger profit.

18 June 2024 | 10 replies
Ultimately you need to put in what the masses will like and not what you like.I do a lot of contemporary designed homes and some of them get white shaker cabinets while others get grey shaker or some other contemporary style and color.

18 June 2024 | 4 replies
So, I have no idea how much money I owe for 2023&2024, how much money is actually mine, how to take advantage of tax deductions/credits/RE professional Status/ renovation costs/perform a cost segregation, if I really need a wealth manager at this point and how to take out my retirement investment and move it to a mutual fund I run independently.My ultimate goal: create systems for my corps to run smoothly and optimize business-related expenses, keep my books up-to-date for both corps so I know my input/output, pay quarterly taxes throughout the year, give myself a modest monthly income and continue to preserve/build wealth and grow my RE PORTFOLIO!

17 June 2024 | 15 replies
My ultimate goal is cash flow to be able to quit my job (self-employed) and focus on real estate full-time.
17 June 2024 | 8 replies
I have found time is better spent building tools to quickly analyze & procure new deals, rather than hyper-analyzing the metrics of one deal, ultimately making initial review faster & more reliable (spend time on the things that make sense, quickly remove things that don't, even junior-level staff can identify good opportunities with the tools, etc).For example, if I'm modeling a SFR to 3-4 unit scheme, I can quickly check the $/sf/mo for each of my proposed units and get a good idea of the GOI without having to manually dig through & find rent comps in that City/Zip:- So instantly I know in Woodland Hills that a Studio is close to $5/sf/mo on avg, 1 Bedroom closer to $4/sf/mo, with the 2 & 3 Bedrooms closer to $3/sf/mo.