
20 January 2025 | 12 replies
It's so bad that my last purchase was in Indiana, which was my first OOS investment, and likely will continue to look there if the market doesn't improve here.

23 January 2025 | 9 replies
You can measure the success of the brokerage by the number of agents that leave after a few years, to start their own brokerage, and whom become successful (some just leave because it's bad and try it on their own and never quite get it).

7 January 2025 | 7 replies
For me as well as the seller.First, you have to define Sub to financing.Do you mean the reckless kind where you overpay for a property, take over the financing and borrow from others to cover closing costs and holding costs when you have no money, no credit, no income, no reserves and can't tell a warranty deed from a deed of trust and you close on the kitchen counteror do you meanbuying below market value, already having a nice income, having reserves, using escrow and title, already understanding the due on sale clause, have done a lot of creative purchases and know when to use and when not to use creative finance and how to recover if something goes amiss?

17 January 2025 | 12 replies
Stainless steel appliances, cleaning service every other week and I am johnny on the spot with repairs.As a result my vacancies are not that bad even with a model designed to be somewhat transitory.

8 January 2025 | 33 replies
Thats good to hear it is resolved and sorry about the credit.

13 January 2025 | 11 replies
Quote from @Jaycee Greene: Assuming you pay asking price, I'd estimate the down payment for something like that using a hard money loan (HML) would be around 40% of the purchase price and your monthly payment would be $2,600 with an interest rate in the low 7% range (probably need a 700+ credit score to get that).

16 January 2025 | 5 replies
Contractors, unless you have a working relationship with them, normally do not want you bouncing ideas off them.Understand what their hourly rate is, have a discussion with them that you are okay with paying them an hourly rate if they walk the property with you and provide you a scope of work along with an explanation of what you can/can't get away with in regards to improvements.ask them if you go with them, if they can credit you the amount that you paid.Once you develop a working relationship with a few contractors, you can bounce ideas off them and expect quality responses.I do not invest in New York.Best of luck.

12 January 2025 | 185 replies
Hopefully his students are better, I don’t like the idea of thousands of people entering the industry trying to find sellers willing to sell via subto who all think it’s okay to bend the truth, especially with transactions like subto that are complicated and require a lot of trust on behalf of the seller (that the buyer will do what they say and keep making the payments and not wreck the seller’s credit potentially affecting their ability to have a place to live in the future because you can’t even rent an apartment with bad credit).

8 February 2025 | 49 replies
-- depends on your risk appetite but leverage can certainly pour gasoline on your real estate investment fire in both a good or a bad way.

15 January 2025 | 34 replies
the note is converted or exchanged for credits?