
20 January 2019 | 15 replies
@Jeremy Lewis Yes. just recycled my profits over and over.

23 January 2019 | 83 replies
@Greg Gibson the RE cycle is slowing down.

23 January 2019 | 11 replies
It's easy to clean, durable, water resistant, and looks great.Another thing I really like about it, is that it's recycled materials, so it is green friendly.

11 February 2019 | 41 replies
if there was not failure by landlords in a significant way there would not be hardly any properties to buy.. they would all be performing and ginning along just fine.. since they are not building any new ones.. its just recycle the old inventory from burnt out landlords who give up their dream of thinking low end rentals is financial freedom.Nicer assets while no immune have so much better chance of treating the landlord right over the course of the years.. better tenants more stability..

30 January 2019 | 3 replies
We recycle tenants all the time.

1 February 2019 | 4 replies
Ideally, you structure this like a BRRRR, so you can pull out your investment and recycle the cash.Your numbers look pretty good.

5 February 2019 | 8 replies
Craigslist or other local selling apps to sell those appliances for cheap.Do it if it is worth your time to sell them, recycle, or give them out for free.If you got no time, I will just let the new appliance's shipping companies take care of it at a small price.I made a mistake of trying to sell an old appliance.

11 January 2020 | 159 replies
If it’s $50k, then I may just pick up a junker, rehab it, refinance it and recycle my cash to another property.

19 December 2019 | 2 replies
The one thing you have to remember with BRRRR is that this strategy is often hyped as a way to recycle the same money over and over again and never have money in the deal.

19 December 2019 | 6 replies
I would imagine you could make more money as a daily rental as compared to a regular month to month or year lease, if you can keep it occupied.Estimate I received from the city for all building permits for a garage conversion ADU was $3,500, with $1,500 of that being a fully refundable (with receipts) recycling deposit.