
26 November 2024 | 86 replies
They made their millions, and while they don't want the gravy train cut off, they also are looking at their personal bank account and thinking: I can put my cash in treasuries and still make $1mm/yr, so 'F' it.B) What is this "long time in business"?

20 November 2024 | 13 replies
Hey @Ana Mills, this ultimately depends on what your current portfolio looks like, your entity structure, and your plans to scale or not.If you have a few STRs and no plans to grow, it's beneficial to have separate bank accounts and credit cards for each property.If you plan to scale to 10+ properties and hold each property within it's own entity, maybe just a checking account per entity and keep some credit cards at the holding company level.

21 November 2024 | 4 replies
I think if you realistically have enough deal flow of good properties, flipping is a faster way to a huge bank account, since a good flip should be between 30-50% return on investment every 4-6 months, if you are doing it all cash.

16 November 2024 | 6 replies
Then a traditional rental once you move out, assuming you will rent the whole house.

16 November 2024 | 6 replies
You don't have to tweak much to take a traditional LTR lease and make it fit an MTR or month-to-month setup.

18 November 2024 | 24 replies
Typically they are not eligible for traditional financing which implies other funding sources (HML, private Monet, self funded, etc).

21 November 2024 | 5 replies
you need to talk to your bank and lender about a lot split.

20 November 2024 | 19 replies
How much money do you have in the bank?

20 November 2024 | 1 reply
This is the breakdown:2 tenants on month to month leases ~$250-$350 less than market1 long term tenant (15yrs) is now on month to month lease and is paying $1500 less than marketAfter consulting with a couple of people and doing some research, it sounds like anything over a I should apply banking rent raise and submit a 60 day notice (all of these units fall into that category).