
18 April 2017 | 9 replies
Replace it with something more durable and move on.
27 April 2017 | 23 replies
Hardening the rentals is generally trying to make them unattractive to crime, and also use very durable materials inside for tenants who I know won't take care of them.

26 April 2017 | 9 replies
@Nate S.locally we have a small cabinet builder who has started specializing in building only doors - He stays VERY busy - if you have a decent priced replacement door available (you will not be able to get these from Lowe's) I would pull the doors, pull the laminate from the cabinet boxes and replace the doors with a modern flat panel or shaker/mission style door ... then paint EVERYTHING cabinets/doors/ and even the current laminate countertop - we use a commercial grade paint vendor that paints a product that looks like stone and it is pretty durable - unless your tenant sets a hot pot on it

2 April 2019 | 4 replies
Affordable / durable (waterproof) / value increasing?

9 December 2018 | 18 replies
It looks as good as new, but probably not as durable.

7 June 2017 | 10 replies
It is durable, sections can be repaired if damaged, holds up well to the tenant, and everyone refers to it as wood even though I have told them it is vinyl plank!

28 May 2017 | 3 replies
I did research them for a while though. the key features seem to be stainless steel (more durable machine since ozone is quite powerful), output of ozone per hour (mg/hour), and length of run timer. (1-12 hours or so)

9 June 2017 | 5 replies
Typically, when BRRRRing you'll use more durable materials (like laminate flooring, formica counter tops, etc) because the intention is to rent it out versus when flipping you might put in higher level of materials (hardwood flooring, granite or quartz counter tops, etc) because you are trying to get top dollar.

23 October 2019 | 10 replies
If it's a rental, maybe not the higher end stuff like granite, but you want it to look appealing and durable as well.Hard Money - SF Lending is who I use..