
16 September 2017 | 15 replies
@Michael Lee Gundersen@Donald AleshireAll else equal, local is always preferable for any form of RE investment, provided that the local market presents attractive opportunities.

17 September 2017 | 3 replies
Partners must be equally yoked financially.

18 September 2017 | 3 replies
In that case, we are equal 1/3 owners of the property, but only 1 is the mortgage guarantor.

24 September 2017 | 10 replies
Are you making more or at least equal to other investment products like the stock market or CDs?

17 September 2017 | 7 replies
In fact, gross rent (before expenses) aren't usually $2000 on such a property....that would be rent equal to 4% of the purchase price....however, that'd be a screaming deal if the numbers shake out.

25 September 2017 | 24 replies
Two totally different worlds and purchasing PROPERTY does NOT afford you any right to pull credit on a person(s) that you do not have a contractual relationship with.OP - Um...I wouldn't bid an amount equal to the first and second total debt if the foreclosing entity is the second lien holder.

12 November 2017 | 13 replies
Hire a public insurance adjuster to negotiate your claim with the insurance company, they will probably be able to get you more than you can personally get from the insurance co. i have not gone through this but this is something that i have read about. you are also better off with replacement cost in your policy, this is equal to what it would cost to fix it vs actual cost, which takes into the account the depreciated value of what was destroyed.

20 September 2017 | 4 replies
If all things are pretty equal you likely should look to your own stomping grounds where you live for a smaller property like this.If you are worth say 2 million and you are buying 10 doors at 50k for 500k and putting 150k down then if it goes bad you might have a small loss and tax write off to get out.If you are worth 400k and putting down 150k into an area you do not know that well with not enough doors to get passive then the risk does not likely equal the reward upside.

17 September 2017 | 0 replies
Should we form an LLC together owning equal amounts of the LLC and then have it purchase the property?