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21 September 2017 | 4 replies
I assume 3% per year when I run my spreadsheets, as that is the national historical average.
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25 August 2017 | 1 reply
Perhaps point out historical posts, books or articles that might help?
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25 August 2017 | 7 replies
Hi all! Tackling a nearly 5,000+ square foot Victorian ... a gorgeous home with stunning woodwork, 7 beautiful oak and maple original mantles ... but also, a fire-damaged nightmare which I'd like to renovate for unde...
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26 August 2017 | 5 replies
I just saw an 1846 built victorian that was "codexed" into two separate units, on a 12,000 sqft lot which used to have a barn structure, and the agent suggested the best value for the property is a flip with the addition of resurrecting that structure (with approvals - this is a historic district) and turn it into two more condos in the back of the lot.
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25 August 2017 | 4 replies
If I put the money up and place a lien on the house,it's my understanding that before the house can be sold,the lien has to be paid.I'm not worried about the house losing value,because it's in a historic part of the city.
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29 August 2017 | 2 replies
Most 1800's and early 1900's homes are in nice historic areas or in bad parts of town.
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8 September 2017 | 13 replies
Our realtor used comps from a historic district a few blocks over for our purchase which over estimated the ARV by 100k.
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6 September 2017 | 17 replies
If you put 20% down on a 300,000 property, assuming a 3% interest rate and 4% annual appreciation (which is simply throwing a dart but based on historical appreciation rates), in 8 years you will sell for $410,000.
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9 March 2019 | 127 replies
to it.. real estate is a long game .. tenant pays off the house that's the ultimate goal get those houses paid for.. not all full of debt and run our numbers at 200 a door times 100 and your going to retire.. some pull it off but not many.. the real profit in rentals is someone else paying your house off for you and at the end of a 15 or 20 year run you have a paid for asset that hopefully went up a bit.For those in CA well you can truly get rich on appreciation and other markets in the US... not so much in areas of historic non appreciation.then you get the Houston thing were act of god wipes you out.. sad but true.
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6 September 2017 | 20 replies
Oh, if it weren't for pesky zoning issues and historic districts.