Kobe McDaniel
How to get Boomers to Sell
23 January 2025 | 2 replies
Depends on their health and any desire they may have to simplify.
Travis Daudelin
Renting to an in home health care agency?
25 December 2024 | 12 replies
Quote from @Carol Corbin: Hi , I’ve been looking like crazy for health care agencies to rent my home to?
Erika Andersen
Advice on working with a home buyer's RE agent using an hourly rate?
23 January 2025 | 8 replies
For example we pay our own income taxes, broker splits and all of our other expenses directly out of what we make including required E&O insurance, MLS dues, licensing fees, Board of Realtor dues, continuing education costs, marketing, advertising, office fees/rent, transaction coordinator/ assistant fees, health insurance, car insurance and maintenance, gas, tires, software, retirement fund, etc.We are not W2 employees with payroll taxes already taken out of our paychecks, company-paid health insurance and matching retirement account plus a guarantee of at least 40 hours paid work per week, sick pay, paid vacation… none of that.So if you’re thinking you’ll be able to pay an hourly wage typical of a W2 hourly employee like $50-85/hr… that’s definitely not going to work.
Devin James
Key Principles that Guide Me
13 January 2025 | 1 reply
.- I was scared to ask out my wife when I was 13 years old.
Ify (Bobby) Anizoba
Starting 2025 Strong
28 January 2025 | 3 replies
Real Estate, Wellness, and Community ImpactAs I move into 2025, I’m focused on deepening my faith and prioritizing wellness, mental health, self-control, and discipline.
Kayla M.
College Student and soon to be Active Duty Military hoping to learn and connect
15 January 2025 | 9 replies
.: Hello Health!
Matthew Allen
Is This Sale Lease Back Strategy A Bad Idea
29 January 2025 | 3 replies
Throughout the year I come across situations where people need to sell there home due to a variety or reasons, job loss, income loss, health, divorce, etc.
Jonathan Small
50% Rule vs DSCR > which do you use to calculate a good rental
15 January 2025 | 4 replies
However, they approach financial health from different angles.The 50% Rule is a quick estimate that suggests operating expenses (excluding mortgage principal and interest) will roughly equal 50% of the property's gross income.The DSCR is a more precise calculation (Net Operating Income / Total Debt Service) that determines if a property generates enough income to cover its debt obligations.Deal example:- Class C middle class neighborhood- 4bd / 2ba single family house- ARV: 190k- Purchase: 105k- Rehab: 35k- Market rent: $1,400-1,525- Section 8: $1,475- Property manager: 10%- Taxes: 125 month- Insurance $1250 yr- HOA: $55 month- purchased and rehabbed with all cash.
Kasey Hardt
Development Update- Charlotte's Pedestrian Bridge
18 January 2025 | 1 reply
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