Arman Mokhlesi
College Student at Boulder Setting Lease Agreement While Living In House
18 November 2024 | 3 replies
Or just pay an attorney for one - it could be well worth the onetime fee of a couple hundred dollars.
Nicholas Cavato
FHA vs Conventional with LLC involved
23 November 2024 | 15 replies
It also makes negotiating things like insurance rates easier because you’re seen as a business, not just an individual.Of course, there are pros and also cons, like setup costs, filing fees, and more paperwork to keep up with.
Brandon S.
Home Team Vacation Rentals VR Reviews - Has anyone used them?
15 November 2024 | 16 replies
Do they require you to pay the design fee or is it optional?
Robert Ok
Rent-to-Own/Lease Option UpFront Costs - How Not To Pay Out of Pocket
16 November 2024 | 4 replies
Option Fee, Security Deposit, etc) can you do it with no money out of pocket?
Troy Welch
Legal Advice-1st Position Lender, Borrower Filed Ch 11 Bankruptcy
20 November 2024 | 2 replies
At Lender's option, a late fee of 5.000% of the installment may be added to any installment not received within ten (10) days of the due date.
Chris Williams
Finding Cash Buyers through buyer's agents
16 November 2024 | 3 replies
The hard thing to do is identify, value, analyze, negotiate and place under contract a “deal” meeting wholesalers minimum requirements that also has room for a decent “wholesalers” fee.
Kyle Jacques
Switching from Evolve to Hospitable Issues?
20 November 2024 | 12 replies
Maybe Evolve would allow you to transfer all bookings you currently have for a fee?
Loren Becker
Assignment using a C.A.R purchase agreement
20 November 2024 | 20 replies
Loren, how did you incorporate your assignment fee into the escrow?
Manuel Reza
What are the best sites to market your rent by the room?
20 November 2024 | 27 replies
@Manuel Reza - $99 was the only fee I had to pay so it was worth it for me and my unique situation.
Jon Pflueger
Predictions on the FARE act and its effects on the NYC rental markets?
15 November 2024 | 2 replies
Short term, assuming the real estate lobby doesn't sue this to keep delaying/appealing, once it goes into effect there will be no more broker fees paid by tenant *unless they hire the broker*Some long term effects I can predict already: - Landlords now having to absorb broker fees will bake this into the rent (e.g. how "no fee" units typically are priced a little higher than other units) - Real estate board will require another document (or checkbox) for tenants to sign stating that they're hiring the listing broker and responsible for compensating them for their fee *if* they apply and are approved- Regular New Yorkers will have an even harder time to find an apartment because you cannot legislate/regulate away a housing crises...