6 August 2018 | 5 replies
Take control of the deed and understand your Aquisition Costs, Closing Costs (Realtor Commission, which to be Frank, can eat up quite a bit of equity), Holding Costs, and in regards to seller costs...

2 August 2018 | 7 replies
For the broken window I would eat it.

2 August 2018 | 8 replies
Take a look at below options and let me know which might be best. 1031 would keep 19.5k in additional deferred taxes to be used for new possible property, but easier said than done.option a: 1031 into another SFH property for 175-180 range with a mortgage and get mortgage for remaining amount. 20k mortgage seems like a waste.option b: eat the 20k tax and use a straight sale of property.

3 August 2018 | 6 replies
I’m sure there’s other factors I’m not seeing but RE is still the safest bet right up until the zombies start eating people.

15 August 2018 | 117 replies
IN Charleston SC were we build each and every porch the roof of the porch is painted Robin egg blue.. this to keep the ghosts at bey.. and I believe that works..

3 August 2018 | 2 replies
I think the only folks who may have bad things to say would be those folks who think company's should provide a premium service without the premium price, you know the have your cake and eat it too fools.

12 August 2018 | 21 replies
We can afford to eat the mortgage payment, but would rather not of course considering we started down the REI path to build wealth and increase cash flow, not dent our wallets.

7 August 2018 | 12 replies
When she gets her orders, I will liquidate the two properties we own together and payoff the mortgages and she will hopefully have a bigger nest egg to purchase something state side at her new duty station, 3-4 years down the road.

6 August 2018 | 4 replies
I've been eating up all the info on the podcasts but haven't been able to spend as much time on the forums.

11 August 2018 | 16 replies
@Jason JamesInvesting a self-directed IRA or a solo 401k plan in rentals is another way to diversify your next egg and all the gains grow on a tax-deferred basis.