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6 December 2018 | 24 replies
Worst case scenario, this seller is capping the income from the POHs with the lot rents and he may not be deducting the expenses associated with maintaining the POHs from the P&L which would alter the financials and give you a distorted NOI and thus a grossly inaccurate cap rate. $525,000 Sale Price-----------> 12% Cap Rate-----------------------------------------525,000 x .12 = $63,000 The NOI may or may not be too far exaggerated or off, can he support this claim with documentation and rent rolls for prior 3 years?
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20 March 2019 | 8 replies
We really don't have to alter the space much to make this happen.
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25 March 2019 | 19 replies
It won't quite get you to 10% the first year, and these ratios only produce about $1,200-1,800/year in cash flow, but they are good homes, easy to rent to decent tenants, better homes with lower maintenance costs, and usually retain tenants longer.The lower you go in the market your numbers get altered by things like:Shorter tenanciesLonger vacanciesMore expensive maintenance (especially on older homes)More late paymentsMore likely evictionsDrama...
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22 March 2019 | 24 replies
If it is grandfathered in as a 2 unit coach house a major alteration of that could have voided that status so it may need to be rebuilt as it's new conforming status
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23 March 2019 | 83 replies
If a tenant replaces or alters any item in the house without your permission and knowledge.... then they are responsible for returning the unit back to the original condition....which they can't do since they got rid of the original toilets.This is a battle I would not fight while the tenant is in place...... let them take the toilets and then charge them for them once they move out since the unit is no longer in the same condition it was on move in.If the toilets were broken and the tenant notified me, I would have replaced them...... since they made no indication of an issue and took it upon themselves to alter my unit, I'm not paying for anything they changed
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12 February 2019 | 6 replies
The tenant does not have the legal right to "alter" your property for any reason - and a mold inspector may drill holes, remove back cabinet panels under sinks, and a whole host of invasive procedures.
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18 February 2019 | 23 replies
They only know one alterative to selling a home.
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18 February 2019 | 19 replies
If so, I'd LOVE to hear why (and then would alter my approach).
24 February 2019 | 222 replies
Thanks Zuck.It’s increasingly rare to have conversations like we’re having here where we may disagree civilly and in the process gain access to info we wouldn't come across normally and alter our thinking because of it.
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18 February 2019 | 20 replies
Hopefully that hit enough keyword alters for everyone ;-).I've only been interested in Real Estate investing for a couple of week, but it has been quite an intense information filled couple of weeks.