
30 April 2024 | 7 replies
sounds like a good deal. a couple things of note to hopefully help: SFR w/ ADU is fantastic, you don't want this to be a triplex on paper. do your DD here, and make sure those ADU's are properly permitted as such. if you intend to live in the property you will have to qualify w/ some type of ATR rules (income/ Ability to Repay).

30 April 2024 | 37 replies
Some of the clients that I work with like the ability to have an easier time qualifying for business lines of credit, business cards, or other forms of credit that is not specifically a mortgage or real estate related.

30 April 2024 | 4 replies
It depends on your appetite and financial ability to carry out the post-purchase fight.

30 April 2024 | 54 replies
The people who will be hurt by this are the people who are wholesaling from other states and the people who don't have the ability to fund a double close.

1 May 2024 | 14 replies
@Amit Shukla No one has mentioned the claims paying ability if the insurance company.

30 April 2024 | 9 replies
In a year if you finally got an eviction you lost the ability for that $100k to generate revenue as a squatter house is not going to be appreciating based on the condition they will leave it for you.

29 April 2024 | 4 replies
Could you share more about your current abilities, and what you'd most like to learn?

30 April 2024 | 6 replies
That could overpower your pump's ability. 4.

1 May 2024 | 24 replies
Following and reading through this thread as I am in a similar position to the original poster.I have evaluated some of the programs out there such as Brad Sumrock, Gino, Rod K, and others ..For me, the value has to come from the ability to have access to people who can help provide deal flow and others who are in a similar position as I am that would be willing to partner with complimentary skillsets.

30 April 2024 | 27 replies
I have been a landlord and investor for over a decade AND also work as a senior/regional property manager so I feel like I see both sides and have some good insight on this- manage yourself if you have the time and fortitude to do so, you will make mistakes but it will pay off, get a real estate license (not hard to do plus you can sell and buy properties and get commission) and know the laws, be willing to do the research, NO ONE IS GOING CARE AS MUCH ABOUT YOUR PROPERTY AS YOU- that being said, not everyone wants to has the time ect or headache or likes asking for rent…FIND A MANAGER THAT ALSO IS A LANDLORD INVESTOR, I can’t tell you how many property managers I’ve tried training and that failed at our company because they just don’t get it from an owner or investor side, like “no tenant we aren’t going to come replace your stove again, no we aren’t going to clean your bathroom cause you didn’t , ability to analyze when to do maintenance and not, ability to explain to tenant owners POV, I tell every owner I am not telling you anything I haven’t done or I’d do my self, a lot of property managers are blue colar type workers and have never invested in their life and just done get it, 4 out of 5 property managers fail at my company because of this especially for single family homes, find a PM with speciality in SFH for your area, for example, a PM in Birmingham MI (upscale area) will fail in Detroit or lower end markets (but that’s were the best ROIs are)