
23 September 2024 | 12 replies
@Srinath Gopinathan The attorney is referring to the due on sale clause.

24 September 2024 | 22 replies
You might the county assessor first and see if you can get the tax ID, from that see if there is a plat map reference, you may get that with a street address, then you can take the legal description and search the recorder of deeds by the legal.

23 September 2024 | 8 replies
Here is an intro to depreciation:https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/51/topics/1121063-expla...Also, cost segregation refers to analyzing what you bought already - the $155k part.

22 September 2024 | 9 replies
There is a lot of new development moving south and west of Notre Dame.As for the specific neighborhoods - I think you can simply refer to the Trulia crime map as it tends to be pretty accurate.

23 September 2024 | 4 replies
A few years later Nickerson “retired”, Lowery wrote his own book, and included “flipping” properties - what’s now referred to as “wholesaling”.

23 September 2024 | 10 replies
I did self manage and self lease, so I screened all tenants looking for no evictions, no criminal background, good landlord references, long term tenancy, etc.

22 September 2024 | 13 replies
Yes Lisa you can refinance out depending on what your situation is:- Full Doc conventional loans will require Income, assets/value of the property, and credit to qualify to refinance out- DSCR loans only require market rental income and credit + enough assets for monthly payment reserves 3-6 months (no personal income or other liabilities are factored in, just the property in question)- Refinancing into another private loan - this is only a bandaid temporarily to provide aide but will not be a permanent solution since most private loans term up or are due in 6-12 months after funding @Matthew Kwan@Carlos Valencia

22 September 2024 | 20 replies
Quote from @Adam Bartomeo: @Joe S.I am sure that we are not the only ones who have one but we made our own.Can I get a copy of yours for reference?

21 September 2024 | 19 replies
In other words, gross negligence refers to an act taken without exercising even the most basic amount of care owed to others.