Justin Crump
Realtor.com by Julie Taylor Market Trends for 2025
5 January 2025 | 4 replies
Rentals have remained pretty hot outside of common slower times around holidays.
Brad Finley
New investor in Cincinnati looking to get into the game
7 January 2025 | 3 replies
Getting analysis when starting out is pretty common, buying that first deal is a huge leap of faith.
Yehuda R.
Renting My Property to Traveling Nurses. Seeking Advice.
8 January 2025 | 5 replies
Spacious common areas and a quiet neighborhood.I’m drawn to this tenant group because traveling nurses often make great renters—employed, responsible, and in need of temporary housing.
Ronit Lodd
Best Property Management Software to Scale to 10+ STR Listings? + Direct Bookings
26 January 2025 | 13 replies
Software is a common question on BiggerPockets.
Fernando Martin-Gullans
Help me use my equity to scale my portfolio
10 January 2025 | 3 replies
The common mistake here is that not ALL your equity is borrowable on a property and even more so on a investment property then an owner occupied property.
Jane S.
Has anyone heard of a company called NOMAD
13 January 2025 | 8 replies
This is a common misconception but we're an online platform where the owner chooses their own price and selects their own tenants.
Michael Deering
Buying Rentals in Japan
25 January 2025 | 15 replies
Rising land prices are not that common either, and limited to select areas.
Terrence Adams
Rental Property Investor Newbie
12 January 2025 | 12 replies
Connecting with other local investors can help you learn the ropes faster and avoid common pitfalls.If you have any specific questions—whether it’s about neighborhoods, property types, or what to expect—I’d be happy to help.
Fernando NA
I need some help on log cabins
7 January 2025 | 2 replies
Many Airbnb guests will want common utilities unless it is in a remote are where you go as a sot to sleep while hiking the area.
Praveen Kumar
Rent to retirement
31 January 2025 | 7 replies
They sell a 4 unit for close to 1 million dollars close to Jacksonville. they want 250k or 300k down. there's no upside. you can google the properties on biggerpockets and there isn't a lot of satisfaction. it's a slow return and get rich slow strategy. our focus is always as a builder to add maximum value, lower cost as low as possible, build and rent and build and sell the same product and raise prices to help investors out. we have a large market share and large purchasing power in our market in columbus ohio. the one strategy I never liked about turnkey new build brokerage companies like them and build2rent or others is they don't really build close to urban centers and most are single family homes. the numbers don't work on single family homes. if single family was the way to go more companies would be doing it. but by far the most common type of new construction built is three story walk up apartments.