
1 April 2020 | 11 replies
I’m starting to look in NE Ohio where I grew up.

30 March 2020 | 2 replies
I live in Arlington, VA but grew up and have a condo (currently rent it out) in Charlotte, NC.

21 June 2020 | 8 replies
I live in Arlington, VA but grew up and have a condo (currently rent it out) in Charlotte, NC.

1 April 2020 | 3 replies
A friend of mine grew up with his dad buying property in all of the kids names.

1 April 2020 | 5 replies
I live in Whitewater but grew up in Fort Atkinson.

20 April 2020 | 53 replies
All my family grew up in trailers.

1 April 2020 | 4 replies
I would say I am in similar situation as you....and i did not plan this asset allocation it just happened as my real estate portfolio and 401K, HSA, and IRA grew over time.40% Stock equities -Tax advantaged or deferred 401K, HSA, IRA10% Stock/Money market - brokerage account50% active real estateI hope to pull out as much equity out of my active real estate portfolio and start investing it in syndicated deal.

2 April 2020 | 10 replies
I live and grew up in Whitewater, WI but went to college at UW Milwaukee so I'm looking to invest in one of these areas to start.

2 April 2020 | 24 replies
I am a Realtor in Amarillo and grew up in Dalhart.

23 April 2020 | 6 replies
The virtual tours will be scheduled walk-throughs of properties for prospective buyers or real estate agents, not repeating video loops.A lot of Realtors already used video tours they promoted through Facebook, and simply turned to them more as people worried more about showing up in person.But the spread of coronavirus has pushed people to rethink other parts of the real estate landscape, too.OpenDoor, a San Francisco-based company that had bought and resold hundreds of Duval County houses in the past year, said online this month it was suspending making cash offers, but added it was working with third-party buyers who might still make offers.As concern grew about the coronavirus’s impact on communities and the economy, Realtors circulated an addendum to sales contracts allowing extra time to go to closing if either side has been in some type of quarantine.Either side could also drop the sales agreement if the buyer couldn’t get financing because of income last from the pandemic, another part of the addendum said.The changes, which both sides would have to agree to, were meant to give leeway people need to keep making deals in uncertain times, said Melanie Green, communications director for the Northeast Florida Association of Realtors.Despite the uncertainty, people have been buying.