
29 May 2024 | 36 replies
First days then they rent a vehicle and start looking for other places in DR to visit and renting other Airbnbs depending on their route to explore the country, and get to know different tourist, historical, cultural spots and, as you said before, nightclubs if they are local, they go sightseeing. to explore every corner of the country, what there is in the city of Santo Domingo, there is not in Punta Cana and each city, no matter how small or large it may be in the Dominican Republic, has its essence and that is what keeps North Americans, Europeans, Latin Americans and Asians investing in different sectors of the country, just ask yourself this question because there are so many foreign and local investors in Punta Cana or the Dominican Republic in general, the answer is simple, remember, the Dominican Republic has it all.

28 May 2024 | 3 replies
Smaller office or shop buildings might bring in more money but need you to know more about running them.

28 May 2024 | 12 replies
(Interview them like anyone else and price shop).

30 May 2024 | 93 replies
And if anyone says a GC doesn't have nearly as much $ tied up into assets, lol, tell em they couldn't be more wrong, I had way more in tools and equipment then any 2 properties cost whole $ but when factor against just the capital outlay.... my shop and all equipment was roughly 12 if not 15,20 properties worth of "stuff".

31 May 2024 | 149 replies
I have never been on a shopping spree like yours in my time on that journey.

28 May 2024 | 8 replies
I would recommend shopping this because at 66% LTV you should be able to get a rate in the low 7s assuming you have a good FICO score.

27 May 2024 | 6 replies
Then I would shop locally first - they will have best rates

26 May 2024 | 4 replies
It is gated, secure, a larger resort, with hotels, restaurants, shops, scuba, snorkeling, a dolphin encounter, etc.It has a marina and golf course.

26 May 2024 | 1 reply
.- Close to transit preferred- Close to jobs/shopping

27 May 2024 | 19 replies
I didn't shop around too much but their business was solely transaction lending so I figure they use the "industry standard" rules.