
7 March 2025 | 0 replies
I’m almost 3 years from construction, which is when my tax exemption on the improvements expires.Now my question is, if I turn the SFR and DADU into legal condos, is there a risk that my original mortgage on the SFR a conventional one could be called?

2 March 2025 | 8 replies
Wind is one of the subtle items that Insurance companies are starting to exclude.

23 February 2025 | 2 replies
Very quick to reply to all our questions and addressed our concerns in a timely manner.

26 February 2025 | 19 replies
Always looking for great deals but very selective as we don't really need to add to our portfolio at this time - but would definitely consider a great deal.

4 March 2025 | 0 replies
Original setup: 700 sqft, one bed, one bath.

3 March 2025 | 1 reply
But the right lender can help you unlock financing that traditional banks simply won’t touch—often with better terms, lower down payments, and more flexibility than conventional options.SBA Loans for Real Estate: 7(a) vs. 504—Which One is Right?

7 February 2025 | 9 replies
For example if one partner added a long-term rental in one party completed a rehab and flip, please properties we need to be filed.

28 February 2025 | 7 replies
@Adeel MakdaI would recommend Forte Properties:https://www.fortepropertieschicago.com/I've known @John Warren for a long time and he is a great manager that specializes in the Chicago suburbs

8 March 2025 | 2 replies
I subsequently disseminate educational resources without hesitation, aiming to establish myself as the leading expert in all aspects of real estate investment.By introducing passive investment—the folks who want a piece of the real estate pie but lack the time or knowledge to handle all the nitty-gritty details—I have also broken the code on attracting possible investors.

5 March 2025 | 4 replies
Quote from @Paul Azad: Real Estate math is annoyingly confusing as syndicators like to use all sorts of different numbers from MOICs to IRRs to AAR-average annual returns to anything else they can come up with to beneficially inflate their numbers for marketing purposes and to avoid the only metric used when investing in all other asset classes, the CAGR- compound annual growth rate, but it's easy to convert, like pounds to kilograms.Here you have 100% in 5 years or 20% AAR, or 2.0 MOIC, you take the MOIC or add 100 to the total return 100%+100% = 200% = 2.0, then you do an exponential equation (x to the Y) with x=2.0 and Y= 1/time in years, so 2 to the 0.2 which is 14.87% that's your CAGR {calculator will have an x to the y button for ease, 2 x/y .2}for example, sp500 just returned 254% over last 10 years, so add 100 so MOIC = 3.54, then to the 0.1 for 1/10 years and CAGR is 13.47%now you can compare returns from syndications to buying VOO or QQQ etc We had a third party track record verification report done and the company who does these (do them alot for mutual funds etc) was asking some of the most basic questions that I thought were no brainers - so I asked - "what are the other ways to calculate these things"?