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Results (10,000+)
Michael Plaks The so-called "STR loophole" - hype or real?
23 September 2024 | 19 replies
They must pay the market rate, the same rate you officially list for the property.The good news is that you staying in your STR for the purpose of making repairs is not personal use.
Evelyn Randolph How to cover roof repair before purchase
20 September 2024 | 7 replies

Hello, BP Community!I reached agreement with a seller to buy their 12 unit building at a very good price, but the property is located in an area where I'm required to have windstorm insurance because it's location clo...

Jennifer Katherine De Loughy Any loans on vacant land?
20 September 2024 | 13 replies
In most municipalities approvals have a few year shelf life and in the event new regulations or new zoning bills are passed you could lose the benefit of the in place zoning/development procedures.
Jeremy Altdorfer I'm going from going from duplexes to 24 units and I don't want to F*** it up.
22 September 2024 | 8 replies
OR should I be happy with what I'm already being charged and not renegotiate.Right now I pay 100% of first months rent for new leases$68 per unit month for management$150 for lease renewal$500 in reserve per unit for emergency repairs (this will add up on a multifamily not sure how I feel about that)$75 in person service12.5% for renovation projects and repairs20% upcharge on evictions last one was ($560 total)Thanks in advance for your help it means a lot!
Jennifer Wood Best Way to Fund Reserves
22 September 2024 | 8 replies
Typically I've seen about $500-$800 annually in repairs per house per year so that can be viewed as a benchmark.
Robin Thornton What Is A Good Amount To Have In Reserves?
22 September 2024 | 13 replies
Other than saving a certain amount from each rent payment (for taxes, insurance, PM, general repairs, maintenance, Cap X, and vacancy), does anyone have a rule of thumb for what a good amount of reserves would be for a SFH or any 1-4 unit property? 
Nadir M. Tenant doesn’t want to place TP in waste basket
23 September 2024 | 81 replies
What would you do in this case esp if they deny paying for the repair?
Lilly Fang My first BRRRR, almost done! Just rented it!
22 September 2024 | 7 replies
He earned quick money as a wholesaler, and I have a house to keep)Rehab cost: $20k (vinyl floor, interior paint, new dual pane windows, new toilets and bathroom vanities, lights, new landscape, new AC condenser, all done by handyman, spent some extra money for minor plumbing and electric jobs, hydro jet sewer lines, clean up attic (had mice), added some insulationTime spent: 3 weeks (two handymen for the first two weeks, one for the last week)Value after repair: probably around $440kJobs still need to be done later: some dryrots, roof work (it's tile roof, roof doctor quoted me $9k, handyman said probably $5k, home inspector said $15k you can get a new shingle roof.
Daniel Windingstad Out-of-State LTR Investing
27 September 2024 | 48 replies
From a “landlording” lens, however, I’d recommend recruiting a solid team of locals (e.g. attorneys, leasing agents, property managers, contractors, etc.) who can help you with closing, leasing, maintenance, repairs, and capex.New construction and turnkey assets are also popular among long-distance investors, since you either won’t have to do much maintenance or capex at the outset (in the case of new construction) or can work with a single, full-service point of contact (in the case of a turnkey property).