
3 September 2018 | 16 replies
I want to be as smart as I can be, so that I don't destroy my chances of continuing a hopefully long real estate investing future, but also don't want to miss out on a good deal that I may not find again for quite some time.The information and opinions I find on this site are invaluable to me, so my first instinct was to come on here and find out what you all think.Would you move forward with the current owner's conditions on my offer, and with the cash flow amount, and with the fact that I am stuck with these tenants for at least a year for one of them?

25 June 2020 | 5 replies
So does blinds getting destroyed nearly every tenant, screens being busted out on what nearly feels a daily basis (seriously, wtf is up with tenants busting out screens all the damn time, I mean really, is there some memo they all get on doing this or what).

27 October 2022 | 25 replies
Can you imagine how are all the BP members who Invested in the communities destroyed this week by hurricane Ian in Florida?

16 January 2022 | 27 replies
The parents are usually paying the rent, but the houses get destroyed and you have a 0% chance of getting a long-term tenant, which is where the real money is made.

26 November 2022 | 53 replies
Someone who doesn't know what they are doing can literally destroy a property with improper foundation work.

28 November 2022 | 4 replies
So here we are with the Fed continuing to raise rates to destroy "demand" (yes to create job losses) and if they stay the course, we could see rents decrease as fewer people are able to afford the rent, which would increase supply.

29 November 2022 | 9 replies
Quote from @Thomas O'Donnell: There are about 50% more dog owners than cat owners and cats are more likely to destroy a unit.

30 November 2022 | 4 replies
Borrowing money to borrow money is over-leveraging and just one small miscalculation can throw you into foreclosure or bankruptcy and may destroy a relationship.

2 December 2022 | 11 replies
Cap/ex and management costs will destroy that low of rents.

8 November 2022 | 14 replies
Your returns can be easily destroyed by HOA fees and you have little to no control over them.Does the condo association have any restrictions on rental units?