
4 February 2014 | 186 replies
When someone is considering signing up for that workshop, we would be happy to discuss the trainer and their qualifications for teaching that class.) If

19 April 2023 | 48 replies
The classification gets tougher out in the rural areas because an A class home can be a mile from a C class with no homes in between, so who knows what to classify the area, but my overall experience has been similar.

31 January 2024 | 2 replies
This is reflected in our regional rates comparison chart which shows reported cap rates rose between 41 and 83 basis points, depending upon region and property classification.

28 December 2019 | 22 replies
@Chris Catt @Nick Leboeuf @Justin Rickson are you Gents using a general identification of neighborhoods in the Albany/Troy area and their classification (A, B, C, D)?

29 January 2024 | 17 replies
I understand there are classifications of zip codes/neighborhoods to Classes A/B/C etc -I was told that usually classes A/B make more on appreciation, but barely cash flow (especially with the current interest rates), and that in C classes, you can generate some cash flow.
19 April 2022 | 17 replies
The significance of this is that the property tax classification has remained which means that my 2-flat pays half in taxes what other comparable units pay.

30 November 2022 | 35 replies
I would even consider buying a program or taking a class if someone is teaching this.

16 October 2014 | 30 replies
The classifications of A, B, C, and D are somewhat subjective.

15 December 2015 | 21 replies
@Wallace Zhou I am referring to both classifications as Turnkey properties.

21 August 2017 | 12 replies
Here is a previous article written on Bigger Pockets about property classification, which you might find useful.