
3 January 2025 | 45 replies
One, I made a profit; other one, I kinda even out.

1 January 2025 | 12 replies
Having fewer but better properties will be more profitable in the long run.

7 January 2025 | 7 replies
I am guessing you like the numbers you see in Strawberry Mansion and Norristown (Montco not Philly) but do you know for a fact that at those numbers, you can do a full gut rehab and be at a number that will allow you to profit, and along the way make some sizable mistakes especially if this is your first project . . .

7 January 2025 | 13 replies
My vote is invest in other markets where the money makes sense and then take that profit to visit whenever you like.

10 January 2025 | 14 replies
Thanks Dennis, I think you're right that planning for a more conservative return would be a good idea.I re-ran my numbers at an even more conservative level:Lower ARV: $800,000Lower income levels (I'm assuming it will take a couple years to get up to full potential income, but giving myself 3 years was a conservative estimate):Year 1: 50k (NOI $1,000)Year 2: 80k (NOI $31,000)Year 3: 100k (NOI $51,000)My ROI numbers come out to:1% (year 1) 46% (year 2) 76% (year 3)This scenario seems like an acceptable risk to me, when the upside seems far more profitable.

6 January 2025 | 38 replies
I had a chat with them on the phone as i was curious about the funding.. but came to the conclusion that the down payment ( the client made to buy) was probably what they paid for the property and the seller carry back note was the profit.. and then the seller carry back note is sold to yet another investor.. who is investing for coupon money.

22 January 2025 | 56 replies
Self employed and not self employed both have advantages and major disadvantages..

5 January 2025 | 2 replies
Purpose of the fund: To purchase old land, rezone, demolish, and rebuild homes to sell at a profit.

7 January 2025 | 6 replies
Sell it for $220-240k rangeInvestor puts in $60-90k, Flips for $350-400k realizing a profit of $50-100k.

4 January 2025 | 25 replies
If done right most of these gains are tax-free- $40K in equity capture (profit) with $20K out of pocket and 13% cash on cash thereafter (300%+ returns)- $24K of equity capture with $32K out of pocket and 36% cash on cash returns thereafter (75%+ returns)- $41K of equity capture with $27K out of pocket and 12% cash on cash returns thereafter (150%+ returns)None of the above numbers include loan pay-down or appreciation.