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Results (6,609+)
Cole Melcher Passive Income-to-Equity Ratio
4 August 2016 | 8 replies
That is after subtracting a 10% vacancy rate and a generous estimate of maintenance expenses. 3.4% seems very low to me, however, I have searched the internet and cannot find any discussions on passive income returns on equity.
Taron R Colenburg Jr Where do I get the numbers to analyze whether I have a good deal?
3 August 2016 | 5 replies
Once you know the property after repair value (ARV) then you will multiply that number by 70% and then estimate the repair cost of the house and subtract the repair cost from the 70% number.  
Chantel Green 70-75 cents on the dollar
27 August 2015 | 5 replies
@Andrew Syrios Actually, ARV ($326,450 sure looks like a Zestimate type number) time 75%, Then subtract repair costs, not before calculating 70%.
Donell Cummings Equity
7 August 2015 | 7 replies
hi donnell. equity evaluation is hard. basically, you need to find comps in the area. look at the average price of those and subtract what the flip house is selling at. thats your basic equity. then, of course you have to add in your rehab costs to see where you are at. if, after purchase and rehab, there is a positive difference between what you have invested and what you could sell for, thats your equity. 
Maurio Eley Sellers are Getting to Me!
7 August 2015 | 6 replies
Find out what it will cost you to get the work done, subtract that from your offer and present that as your new offer to the seller.
Mathew Deines House Hacking at $1,050,000! - Only $5,000 (net) out of pocket! - San Diego
4 February 2016 | 85 replies
Do they subtract the taxes and insurance and then use 75% of the rent?
Jason Hatfield Factoring Cost of Money in Offer Price
11 August 2015 | 5 replies
When you are determining an offer price are you subtracting the average costs of hard money?
Milton F. Need advice seller going through bankruptcy
18 August 2015 | 4 replies
Because the "costs to sell a property" is about 10% so if it's worth 170 it costs  17k to sell, I don't see where there's a payday thereOnce the foreclosure starts,you've  got a huge amount of attorneys fees and interest subtracting from the equityThere's no deal here, it's just a waste of time
Elle Scott What's the next move? Needing advice...
16 April 2015 | 17 replies
We then subtract the interest applicable to the loan and we are left with $2k ($11k - 9k).
Javier Osuna Wholesaling question: What if the seller I'm working with is already working with a realtor?
15 April 2015 | 11 replies
(Subtract that from sales price toget loan balance.)How much are the monthly payment on the mortgage?