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Results (10,000+)
Roger Mace Should you refinance a DSCR?
27 November 2024 | 11 replies
Understand Prepayment Penalties: Review the terms of your existing loan for details on the prepayment penalty.
Sandeep Dhall Looking for a Property Manager in Cincinnati- 45213 zip code
2 December 2024 | 4 replies
Are their listings detailed with good quality photos?
Alex Collins 2025 1st Quarter 1st REI!!!
4 December 2024 | 9 replies
Write those details down, then start looking for properties that match it.
Eric Carlstrom First-Time STR Buyer --- Feedback / Guidance Requested
26 November 2024 | 21 replies
Thanks for your detail!
Ethan Anderson Valuing Billboard Easement
26 November 2024 | 12 replies
Never could get all the details of the lease though, so didn't go thru.A couple of considerations:1. 
Joseph Waitkevich Airbnb in Vegas
5 December 2024 | 10 replies
Hi @Eric Fernwood, This is very helpful thank you for your detailed response.
Benjamin Spiegel Off Market Special Situation: 65K SF Class-A Mixed-Use Building from Forced Seller
30 November 2024 | 1 reply
Property Details- Size: 64,000 SF Class A mixed-use building - Commercial Space: 25,000 SF - Residential Space: 39,000 SF (32 duplex apartments, 2BD/2BA) - Parking: 165 spaces Vacancy and Rental Status35% of the prime commercial space (about 10,000 SF) was vacant and not marketed for rent online. 13 of the 32 duplex apartments were rented at 35% discount to comps What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?
Shane Sours Veteran that is new to real estate investing
30 November 2024 | 2 replies
Here are some common pitfalls I see for new investors from the private lending perspective:• Insufficient Funds: most lenders are going to be able to lend a first-time investor somewhere around 75-80% of the purchase price of an existing property + 100% of your estimated rehab budget (or an 80/100 loan, for short).
Benjamin Spiegel Off Market Special Situation: 65K SF Class-A Mixed-Use Building from Forced Seller
30 November 2024 | 0 replies
Property Details- Size: 64,000 SF Class A mixed-use building - Commercial Space: 25,000 SF - Residential Space: 39,000 SF (32 duplex apartments, 2BD/2BA) - Parking: 165 spaces Vacancy and Rental Status35% of the prime commercial space (about 10,000 SF) was vacant and not marketed for rent online. 13 of the 32 duplex apartments were rented at 35% discount to comps What made you interested in investing in this type of deal?
Stuart Udis If you are buying lower cost SFH's what is your exit?
9 December 2024 | 20 replies
In my opinion, you can make as much money buying cheap houses as you can buying expensive homes.Affordability is an issue for a lot of Americans so I will argue cheaper cities performed better over the past 10 years than more expensive markets / houses.San Francisco, CA, Seattle, WA and New York, NY are considered expensive markets.If I look at Zillow's price estimate for homes comparing 2016 and 2024San Francisco - Average Price of home was $1,145,000 and now its 1,262,000(Increase of 10%)Seattle - Average Price of home was $561,000 and now its $848,000(51%)New York - Average price was $561,000 and now its $766,000(37%)Memphis, TN, Indianapolis, IN and Clevlenad, OH are considered cheaper markets.Zillow is showing more appreciation in these markets over the same time periodMemphis - Average price was $73,000 and now its $149,000(104%)Indianapolis - Average price was $107,000 and now its $225,000(110%)Cleveland - Average price was $54,000 and now its $109,000(101%)Population increases and job growth are two indicators that result in appreciation.Two of the cheaper markets listed above(Memphis and Cleveland) are not increasing in population.