
2 December 2024 | 9 replies
Any suggestions on a financial institution for a loan?

3 December 2024 | 5 replies
We're using Digb to track portfolio, financials, and to issue IRS Schedule K-1s to our LPs.

1 December 2024 | 7 replies
I know from the a deed recorded last month that FreddieMac got house from foreclosed former owner for 180k.

3 December 2024 | 26 replies
Their explanation is that the banking service they use (Thread Bank) and their agreement with Stripe (payments) leaves them with no choice but refund if such a request is made, even though they have records of the tenant authorizing payments via their own platform.

4 December 2024 | 6 replies
To avoid these, create an operating agreement outlining roles, responsibilities, financial contributions, and handling disagreements.

4 December 2024 | 6 replies
@Thomas Sheehanonly you can decide what makes sense for you financially, but I would not put $200-250K into a property to generate minimal cash flow. i look to minimize my outlays when I purchase.

5 December 2024 | 4 replies
It's crucial to evaluate how the deal performs with the new mortgage:Updated Financials After Refinancing: Market Value: $459,000 Mortgage Amount (80% LTV): $367,200 Equity: $91,800 Interest Rate: 5% (30-Year Amortization) Assuming after 12months the rate will drop to 5%Monthly Expenses: Mortgage Payment (5% Interest): $1,971 (Now you are paying interest and principals) Property Tax: $260 (assuming has been increased with a 4% from last year) Utilities: $361 Insurance: $104 (+4% Adjustment) Vacancy: $166 (now after 12 months we can assume we have some vacancy at 5% factor on annual rent) Repairs & Maintenance: $166 (now after 12 months we can assume we have repairs at 5% factor on annual rent) Total Monthly Expenses: $3,028Rent Income after 12 months assuming annual rent increase at 5% : $3,323Cash Flow: $295$ per month 😊Long-Term Gains: $5,418 Principal Paydown year 2 (this will increase each as you pay off your mortgage $36,720 Property Appreciation (assuming 8% per year) $3,540 Cash Flow (this will increase as rents rise)Total Annual Return on Investment: $45,678 with just $ $22,789 remaining in the deal.

4 December 2024 | 8 replies
This house isn't a homerun financially but I felt like it was a good one to start on..

5 December 2024 | 11 replies
A costly example could be remodeling information claiming a permit was issued when there wasn't any in the county's records.