
17 January 2025 | 4 replies
Unless you find a buyer with a very specific criteria who is willing to pay above the typical 70% - repairs.

18 January 2025 | 17 replies
@Chris Collins Tenants usually pay all utilities.

29 January 2025 | 22 replies
Second pro is that you get to lower your living expenses or live "rent free" by having your tenants pay for your mortgage payment.

5 February 2025 | 69 replies
For those investors using lending we allow 10% down - this is to help offset other fees you will have to pay - points, broker fees, etc.

20 January 2025 | 4 replies
This is obviously much better than $1,400 per month.On top of that, you will now get 2x the depreciation write-off so your taxes should go down.On top of that, you will now get 2x the appreciation when real estate price go up.On top of that, your tenants are helping you pay down the loan, initially at about $100/mo for both properties, which gradually gets better and better.On top of that, you now have more units so if one or two goes vacant, you have more renters covering the losses of the vacant units.If you want to keep these properties, I would do a cash-out refi and go buy more rental real estate.

18 January 2025 | 1 reply
For example, a buyer putting 20% down on a $500k home would pay around $500k in interest over the 30-year life of a typical mortgage at a rate around 6.5%.

30 January 2025 | 56 replies
However, without an MLS in the area, determining the right price to pay can be challenging.This lack of records makes our job more demanding but also gives me unique opportunities to help clients pay the right price.

16 January 2025 | 6 replies
The reason is because the companies that back these assets, and some others, have a 1:1 between their tokens and the USD (I'm unfamiliar if EURS, THKD, and stables of other fiat offer 1:1).A possible scenario would be that you offer the seller to pay in a stable coin, like mentioned above.

18 January 2025 | 11 replies
If it has any basis at all (such as you left the apartment during your lease term for what you felt was a justifiable reason and stopped paying rent, but the landlord disagreed) then you may be better off paying a rather small settlement.

20 January 2025 | 5 replies
Please see the rough numbers below :Tear down house price 350k,Construction cost 165 sqft * 2 build=627k too much for the land unless your exit is 3 million. don't reinvent the wheel. no single family home builder is paying 300k for land. that's miami florida prices where I live. we buy land 50k and under in Columbus Ohio. keep land at less than 10% of after built value.