
14 January 2020 | 0 replies
https://www.wdrb.com/in-depth/boutique-hotel-bar-planned-on-bardstown-road-in-cherokee-triangle/article_6af6c634-370d-11ea-8c15-db04079e2253.htmlLots of these popping up of late.

1 November 2020 | 13 replies
Those top of the line items are again always manipulated and can throw the calculated cap +/-3.0.

22 May 2020 | 8 replies
The cubic foot limit is an interesting one as you could have a pretty dramatic effect on that quantity by manipulating floor to floor heights and roof pitches, seems as though it would encourage more cramped spaces to get the building in under the limit.

21 January 2020 | 0 replies
Do in depth research on the area, the individual neighborhoods, appreciation in the area, etc.

22 January 2020 | 1 reply
Maybe you can find ways in the early stage to dovetail the two, as an example, learning about credit scores and debt while aggressively paying down actual debt and manipulating you credit factors to increase your score. another example, mind an investor who need help in your area, work for free to learn stuff and ask instead for a tiny slice of a deal, learn and build your future at the same tie. it's a life long pursuit!

23 January 2020 | 37 replies
The only people making money wholesaling are the guys selling you all of that education.To be successful connecting buyers and sellers you need to haveAn in depth knowledge of the market.Marketing skills.Sales skills.Negotiation skills.Accurately estimate rehab costs.Understand how to much time it would cost to run a renovation on the properties you are presenting.My advice get a real estate license.

22 January 2020 | 6 replies
ARV = (Property’s Purchase Price) + (Value of Renovations)You can most accurately calculate this when you understand how how much value each rehab item will bring THE BOOK ON ESTIMATING REHAB COSTS by Bigger Pockets will help with figuring that out or you can checkout an article they already published going pretty in depth on the topic for quickly analyzing ARV's when searching for a deal.

22 January 2020 | 0 replies
.), but I was wondering is there any REQUIREMENT or real perceived benefit to submitting this to them outside of my accidental Zestimate manipulation (which I wouldn't do again, or intentionally)?

13 October 2020 | 9 replies
I have heard about incurring state tax on those properties, but haven't looked into it too in-depth yet.Thanks for the info!

28 January 2020 | 7 replies
If you are dealing with an addition built on 12" beams (or if the original foundation is old and not built to current standards), the repair company might not be able to push the piers down to refusal depth or psi due to the beam not taking the load, thus leveling it, but not guaranteeing it will not continue to move in the future, thus not providing warranty.9.