26 February 2015 | 14 replies
Here in CA, i believe there are anti-discrimation laws that state a landlord cannot discrimate on the SOURCE of the income, nor can they refuse households based on the sex of the applicant, or the number of applicants.While i totally understand the first 2 (source of income, as long as legal, and sex of applicants) I dont understand why if you are renting a studio with zero bedrooms, you can't limit the occupancy to say one person.Thoughts?

12 March 2015 | 10 replies
The water heater is located in the attic with a potential to cause a lot of damage if it fails.So, here in Houston we have hard water and according to my plumber extremely high in my case (Hardness: 25 Gr; Total Chlorine 1 ppm).

5 April 2015 | 39 replies
We didn't have a lot growing up (single parent household), and I think that had a lot to do with making me this way. 7.

28 January 2019 | 48 replies
If my wife and I had started on this path very young and with no background in this and, say, raking in upwards of $120,000 in household income yearly in our jobs, there's no way we would have gone into low-income landlording.

8 April 2016 | 15 replies
Usually costs more and does not give a descent return but what I have done for some of my tenants is offer them low interest personal loans for house hold items (TVs furniture etc.)

3 February 2018 | 13 replies
If you can afford to live in Canton, you have a household income of 80K to $150K easily.

12 April 2017 | 5 replies
As part of the governmental push not to create high concentrations of underprivileged households in one location, which some argue creates a cycle of poverty, the Project Based Assistance contracts are no longer rewarded (the existing Projects that have HAP contracts can continue to operate and renew and there is a caveat that while no new contracts are rewarded you can transfer a contract from a facility where the owner does not wish to renew).

2 September 2016 | 1 reply
I am currently living with my girlfriend and she pays for some of the household bills.

15 March 2017 | 2 replies
The evidence suggests, however, that homeownership decisions by younger households have much more to do with affordability than location and lifestyle preferences," study authors said.The Harvard study found homeownership rates for millennials were 5 percent higher in metro areas where median home prices were 20 percent below the national median.

25 March 2021 | 11 replies
Looked at average prop age, leading industries, average sales price, average monthly rent, average household income, number of fortune 1k companies, average appreciation over last year and last 10 years, and finally cost of living index.