
25 February 2025 | 1 reply
You’re in a solid position, but the challenge here is that your equity is tied up in a property that’s cash flow neutral—which means pulling cash out could push it into negative territory if you’re not careful.A HELOC is the most flexible option, even if you’re planning for long-term investments.

28 February 2025 | 14 replies
I would have to agree on the inflatable as well.

27 February 2025 | 5 replies
This allows me to pay off the private loan (~$550K principal + $49,500 interest).

27 February 2025 | 4 replies
I wouldn't touch anything outside the urban core. if your strategy is to buy existing and old I'd recommend not to. as a newer investor depending on your liquidity look at build to rent development. building investment properties below market value by 25% and refinancing out of it to do it again. the urban core has tax abatements as well that are 15 years right now you can apply for. that means that taxes will be around $600 to $800 per year. there's cash Flow but the existing inventory market dried up a few years ago in the urban core. local realtors are going to push you to the trash areas like hilltop, south linden, etc because it's the only place numbers work. columbus is great, but remember a tenant who pays $1800 a month is different than a tenant who pays $900 a month. let me know if I can help any other way!

5 March 2025 | 3 replies
Use Real Estate By the Numbers as your guide, make sure it tracks the loan pay down and depreciation and have all of those numbers pour into a Schedule E.

31 January 2025 | 5 replies
I realize it's just an example and my comment is a generalization but just something to be aware of.With regards to the original question, I think it comes down more to what you want to do and what the offer is for walking away vs. rebuilding.That is the exact example a public insurance adjuster used when speaking to a local investor group a few years ago.

21 February 2025 | 6 replies
In Spain, this is usually seen more as a barrier as people rather would invest in individual units (less purchase capacity needed), but by rethinking the setup up it matches the criteria of a multi-family deal.

7 March 2025 | 2 replies
Purchase price: $107,000 Cash invested: $80,000 Sale price: $280,000 Sourced an off market fix & flip deal in the western suburbs of Atlanta near an area where I knew an Amazon facility was being constructed and buyer demand would pick up.

28 January 2025 | 6 replies
I can handle about 80% of the work for a property flip.

20 January 2025 | 3 replies
A little over 15 years ago, in the late spring of 2009, I was a brand spanking new real estate agent coming off of a miserably failed real estate investment venture.