19 November 2024 | 10 replies
First of all I put my acceptance criteria clearly in the ad: minimum credit score (enter X amount, 620 is what I use),income 2-3x rent, good rental history, references, no evictions, acceptance dependent upon background check and employment verification, pet policy, desired lease term, etc. so that people will hopefully read that and not come to the open house if they know they won’t qualify.

20 November 2024 | 4 replies
I put my criteria clearly in the listing: 3x income over rent, 85% on-time payment history on credit report, and good references from past landlord.The biggest mistake you can make is taking the word of a current landlord.

19 November 2024 | 6 replies
They allow you to get funds at more favorable terms than with a loan or credit card.

21 November 2024 | 18 replies
No eviction protection so since you gave to settle on someone with and low 600s credit score if you have to go to court they get to charge for their time on that.

11 November 2024 | 2 replies
That same idea will typically apply to other types of credit.

19 November 2024 | 12 replies
They care more about the asset value than your own credit history.

17 November 2024 | 8 replies
Market rent was about $3,300 at the time, but we agreed to a $5,000/month rent that includes $1,000 rent credit (which was stated on the option contract, not the lease contract).

14 November 2024 | 0 replies
Do an Internet search for “integrative clinic near me.”Most HAS/FSA plans expire at year-end; check with your company of Issuance for program details and restrictions.

14 November 2024 | 0 replies
Do an Internet search for “integrative clinic near me.”Most HAS/FSA plans expire at year-end; check with your company of Issuance for program details and restrictions.

20 November 2024 | 8 replies
If we do everything correctly and we screen carefully (credit check, employment verification, etc.), what would be the worst-case scenario?