
5 June 2024 | 10 replies
As I got to know more investors, I learned many of them were regular people that worked hard, saved up, and invested.

3 June 2024 | 6 replies
So, it will reduce your net income and therefore your taxable income.

4 June 2024 | 4 replies
The CMA is right on the sale price - My payments to the seller includes a 25 year amoritization rate, so my monthly "mortgage" to the seller(300k with interest) is greater than their current mortgage. (200k with the same interest rate)- Going the regular financing route (25% down) is not desirable since I would need to dip into my primary residence HELOC for the downpayment.

4 June 2024 | 5 replies
So far as actual days of the week, Mondays can be busy with regular operational items, weekly reports, weekend follow-up, etc but generally speaking Friday is much busier than Monday because teams are getting ready for weekend move-ins and more people come to see apartments Friday/Saturday than any other day of the week.
5 June 2024 | 20 replies
Did you get any kind of regular home warranty?

2 June 2024 | 13 replies
It's that lightbulb moment where you realize that even after paying the surcharge to pay a mortgage with a card, you still earn positive cashback, making your net interest rate on your mortgage effectively a negative percentage. 8% cashback - 3.5% pay by card surcharge = 4.5% free money, and considering my mortgage interest rate is 2.75, that effectively means I pay no mortgage interest and still earn 1.75% free cashback.And the best part is that this passive cashback is generally speaking not treated as taxable income.

5 June 2024 | 29 replies
Once occupancy permits are done, then you get a regular mortgage.

3 June 2024 | 4 replies
I recently lost my job, have about $150k in cash to invest, have a few cash flowing rental properties, and really want to use the $150 to maximize cash flow so I can avoid a regular job and focus on real estate and starting a new business.