
27 November 2021 | 12 replies
Here is an interactive map that I feel gives some insight: https://www.nytimes.com/intera...I do believe that in 20-30 years, Midwest markets like Cleveland, Detroit and Pittsburgh will be even more desirable given their proximity to fresh water and they all have existing infrastructure to support larger populations.

24 November 2021 | 4 replies
With recreational destinations, it helps to have an infrastructure that can serve tourists.

14 December 2021 | 1 reply
Nature and provider of the utilities (city water or well, city sewer or septic, other utility sources and whether or not they are direct billed to the tenant or not)Age of the parkUnderground infrastructure age and condition (have there been any repairs?)

24 November 2021 | 3 replies
I saw one of my tenants name in the police report section of the newspaper. Speeding and no drivers license. Today I invited him to my Thanksgiving dinner. He said he can't. Said some of his friends were coming ov...

6 December 2021 | 5 replies
I asked my agent to monitor homes that recently went off the market to see if any of them had a deal fall through so I could immediately make an offer for a closing with in 30 days to the desperate sellers.

1 January 2022 | 9 replies
A developing area, also a QOZ, many Cincy institutions and largest business owners are invested in the area. new infrastructure has been developed so public and private money has come into the space.

16 March 2022 | 1 reply
We could sell them as fee simple lots, however, this would incur greater infrastructure costs (public road size requirements vs private road) than if we created a condo scheme -- wherein we would sell units (equivalent to a lot).

3 December 2021 | 3 replies
Why can't the renter check the CO2 monitor, smoke detector, and fire extinguisher?

5 December 2021 | 3 replies
@Ryan King I see you have a good response already but iBgger Pockets has some great state forums and usually there are good locals that monitor those.

7 December 2021 | 7 replies
Monitor / Review your success (keep the process active at all times) From an insurance perspective, the broadest policy form is called a "special form" policy (aka open perils or all-risk).