
2 August 2024 | 12 replies
The most popular way to speed up your real estate growth is to buy fixer-uppers, rehab them with mostly sweat equity, rent them out for significantly more than 1% of your total purchase price per month, and then refinance the property to extract as much money as possible for your next down payment.It’s doable, but you need to find the worst property on the nicest block, as this will play a significant role in your refinance discussions later.Let me know if you would like to chat more and learn about the Toledo market, which is well-suited for what you are looking to do.Best regards,Phillip DakhnovetsGuardian Property Management419-740-0370

1 August 2024 | 5 replies
If you are a solid investor focused agent, I’d be game to discuss land development + ground up construction of a well designed building you'll be fine in Fort Lauderdale or anywhere in South Florida. you will probably need more liquidity than existing but the deals are much better.
1 August 2024 | 6 replies
The room rental will likely become even more popular than it is right now.

31 July 2024 | 40 replies
The other half is: excellent finished product design and management at a reasonable cost.

1 August 2024 | 3 replies
I remember reading something about being there (x) amount of days and having an area designated as your separate space.

1 August 2024 | 42 replies
They started off in the one-off single family home modular designs but in the recent years have acquired facilities across the US to really ramp up supply to meet the demand of the market especially here in LA for developers looking to big large affordable multifamily housing.

31 July 2024 | 19 replies
@Jason Lopez I essentially did STR for about 25 years before it became popular.

29 July 2024 | 7 replies
Who would I get in contact with for what trends are popular for rehabs?

30 July 2024 | 6 replies
@Jason Wray if I register an LLC on Florida's website, do i still need to designate a registered Agent since I live out of state?

31 July 2024 | 4 replies
For Regulation D, Rule 506(b) Offerings, you can self-certify by answering a set of questions designed to see of you meet one of the SEC's 8 definitions of an Accredited Investor.