
13 November 2024 | 5 replies
We've been doing our prices manually but have a few properties set up in Pricelabs with some specific custom pricing as an experiment to see if PL works for MTRs.

13 November 2024 | 1 reply
When networking on BP or in person, being clear about your goals will make a big difference.Are you mainly interested in finding rental properties, connecting with other landlords, or exploring specific asset types?

13 November 2024 | 4 replies
We are south of Saint Louis, Missouri, specifically working in the Jefferson County, Saint Francois County, and Saint Genevieve County markets.

14 November 2024 | 22 replies
Try to get that list specific.

13 November 2024 | 12 replies
Let me know if I missed any worthy candidates also.Some pros and cons you've found with any of these specific sites would be highly valued as well.

13 November 2024 | 4 replies
If in a tenant-friendly state, the Payment Plan may make sense - but only if tenant signs document stating specific payment dates & amounts and can update their income info to prove they can afford the payments.

15 November 2024 | 7 replies
Changes some of my answer below, but here would be most of the types of transactions you would have in these accounts and between them.Property transactions would be: all property specific rents and expenses, allocated expense transfer to the master LLC and transfers to master LLC bank account for profit AND/OR property management fee.Master LLC transactions would be: Shared expenses going out, reimbursements/transfers from properties for their allocated share of those expenses coming in, the transfers from your properties deemed as profit AND/OR property management fee and then transfers to your personal accounts deemed as owner distributions.Other transfers that could occur is if the master LLC needs to transfer to the properties for capital expenditures above and beyond the reserves you might leave in their accounts.

16 November 2024 | 12 replies
Hi all, I would love some advice on my specific situation.

22 November 2024 | 92 replies
Instead of fixating on a strict 1%, 2%, or 0.7% rule, think of it as a flexible guideline that needs to adapt to the market and specific property characteristics.