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Results (10,000+)
NA NA Short Term Rental Questions
12 January 2025 | 7 replies
He is an investor, investor focused realtor, STR property manager and handles everything from Step A-Z.
Jenna Schulze Best city to begin investing
8 January 2025 | 34 replies
From what I have heard, Dayton is a similar market, and you will ALWAYS save money by investing locally by not needing to hire a Property Manager (yet).
Stefano Vrolijk First investment property as a foreign citizen
12 January 2025 | 12 replies
Miami is a great place to invest both for short and long term rentals and with condos, property management is simplified but be sure to ask about HOA fees as early as possible especially if you intend to go with a DSCR loan.
Serge Hounkponou New member from Indiana
7 January 2025 | 4 replies
that we’ve learned in our 24 years, managing almost 700 doors across the Metro Detroit area, including almost 100 S8 leases:Class A Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 3-5 years for positive cashflow, but you get highest relative rent & value appreciation.Vacancy Est: Historically 10%, 5% the more recent norm.Tenant Pool: Majority will have FICO scores of 680+ (roughly 5% probability of default), zero evictions in last 7 years.Class B Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, decent amount of relative rent & value appreciation.Vacancy Est: Historically 10%, 5% should be applied only if proper research done to support.Tenant Pool: Majority will have FICO scores of 620-680 (around 10% probability of default), some blemishes, but should have no evictions in last 5 yearsClass C Properties:Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, high cashflow and at the lower end of relative rent & value appreciation.
Amol Kulkarni Amol Kulkarni - I need a PM
5 January 2025 | 4 replies
Try interviewing at least three managers.1.
Bob Asad How do you prevent co-mingling of funds?
7 January 2025 | 24 replies
As an Accountant and CFO with two decades of experience in real estate management, I’ve observed that landlords often handle things differently.
Augusta Owens Planning my process
9 January 2025 | 5 replies
I would focus on a duplex first so you learn house hacking and management of one tenant.
Kody Smith Transition from SFR to Multi Family 10-20 units
6 January 2025 | 17 replies
Quote from @Kody Smith: without getting too deep into my finances, what my strategy is...1. take loans to buy properties (leverage)2. fix/flip for day to day cash flow income3. use some of the fix/flip income to buy consistent cash flow through:- business acquisition, - commercial properties (MF and store fronts),I have no intention of doing ALL of the management myself, I will hire management as needed (medium term goal)my expected core role is money provider, evaluating the numbers, making decisions, and connecting with investors, wholesalers, lenders, contractors, and property owners.while I am just on step 2 of the journey, I am looking toward step 3 to stabilize, and not worry about if house prices drop mid project or not (or not worry as much) So to be fair this is more about obtaining and growing a real estate business not simply buying rentals for cashflow.
Mark A. McElhannon Basic approach to secure financing on an investment property
8 January 2025 | 7 replies
My markup is always lower than the original lender's because I don't spend money advertising during the Super Bowl, my president doesn't have a corporate jet, and we don't have layers of management we need to pay.
Matt Royle STR on a L1B Visa
7 January 2025 | 3 replies
Based on a quick answer from Perplexity it seems like there would be no issue with you buying the home and collecting passive income, but you may not be allowed to manage it yourself since that is considered active work.