11 October 2024 | 1 reply
Standard questions keep you on the right side of fair housing laws—discriminatory questions may come back to bite you.Here are 12 of the best questions to ask.1.

17 October 2024 | 21 replies
Helens now to be fair he is quite brilliant at construction owns a HUGE underground construction company that he sold to his employees and loves these type of off the main stream projects and has put many hours into it.. and not made a dime LOL.. he donated one of the fully built homes to the local collage..

13 October 2024 | 12 replies
It is not much larger than my tankless, but my tankless is fairly large compared to many.

14 October 2024 | 22 replies
You need to maintain a reserve to handle unexpected costs in the first year.How much should you maintain in the reserve?
14 October 2024 | 1 reply
To thrive in real estate investing, you must maintain a firm grip on your finances.

13 October 2024 | 10 replies
Because banks know that investors/tenants don’t maintain properties as well, and fight needed reserves and assessments — don’t even think of arguing against the fact).

15 October 2024 | 21 replies
With the college close by I figured demand would be fairly good.You said it's more of a challenging market and it's clicky, is that in regards to finding and keeping tenants happy when it comes to multiple personalities?

14 October 2024 | 9 replies
It was simple and cheap.However, it still takes time and money to set up and maintain the LLCs.

15 October 2024 | 14 replies
🏦To get to the point where you can avoid personal guarantees, you’ll need to build your business credit over time:Open trade lines in your business’s name (utilities, vendors, etc.).Make sure you’re reporting payments to business credit agencies like D&B.Keep your debt-to-income ratio low and maintain good cash flow.It doesn’t really matter if it’s an LLC or S-Corp—what matters most is establishing the business as a strong, creditworthy entity.But yeah, in the early stages, personal guarantees are almost unavoidable.

14 October 2024 | 3 replies
FL appreciation - property is still fairly newish and don't want to miss out on potentially solid capital appreciation in next 5-10 years - assuming that happens-Other caveat is ability to sell in coming few months without paying any capital gains taxes, which will not always be the caseThere is no crystal ball, Appreciation is/was the goal but who knows if that will happen and at what rate realistically with increasing costs of ownership here.