
20 November 2014 | 10 replies
Someone should do a helmet cam of this walkthrough and post it for those of us 1600 miles away :-)

8 December 2014 | 6 replies
I've heard this before in the past, and it always revolves around this "perceived" fair housing violation.I personally think that processing applications that way is more likely to put you in hot water for a fair housing violation than anything else, here's why:The way I look at it is you have shown that you believe them to be qualified since you never denied them, but chose to willingly ignore the qualified applicant in favor of someone who came along later.

6 December 2014 | 1 reply
He said to write a business plan revolving around the down payment paying back the down payment in 10 years at 10%.

11 September 2016 | 19 replies
Home equity line of credit (HELOC)A second mortgage with a revolving balance, like a credit card, with an interest rate that varies with the prime rate.

1 January 2015 | 26 replies
In Florida you would need a CAM license to manage condos.

26 January 2015 | 6 replies
Look up 'trail cams' as well.Recommendations here are kind tough.

14 November 2022 | 2 replies
@Aaron Heers yes exactly . . . like a credit card a HELOC is a revolving credit line.

1 January 2022 | 0 replies
Hey Everyone and thank you for reading my post.I am looking to find an unsecured, revolving line of credit in the UK.In the USA, this product is called a Line of Credit (LOC) and the most popular ones are offered by Credit Unions (smaller community banks).In the USA, a LOC:1.

1 January 2022 | 0 replies
Once I paid back the 10K, I would be able to draw it back out again, repeatedly (revolving line of credit just like a credit card)4.

14 November 2022 | 7 replies
Don't carry revolving debt or balances of more than 30% of your total credit worthiness, pay your cards on time, don't close old accounts and be sure to resolve an outstanding balance discrepancies that any of the 3 major agencies may be holding against you.I always advise on checking your free credit report once a year from each of the 3 reporting agencies to be sure there is no false information or accounts that you don't recognize.