
28 October 2024 | 3 replies
In fact, many of their stories, just relied on, picking up a few investments in solid areas, taking care of them, and holding onto them for a long time.

29 October 2024 | 24 replies
After that I plan on continuing to invest in MUP with a conventional loan or transition to SFH.

29 October 2024 | 10 replies
Here are a couple of SEC 8 specific criteria...1) If their court records or pay stubs show any record of garnishments, be careful because SEC 8 ignore garnishments and the applicant will have trouble paying their portion, just like any other tenant would.2) If you see an outstanding landlord judgment, call the caseworker to ask when the tenant first was accepted into the program.

30 October 2024 | 11 replies
If you're talking about investing in New Construction versus existing houses, and not GC'ing new construction then your lenders won't care about your construction background.

31 October 2024 | 19 replies
Be careful with that BRRR stuff.I personally would not do Remote BRRR as there is just a lot of risk with 1) risk of embezzlement with contractors 2) change orders and 3) bank doing bait and switch doing a lower appraisal and/or LTV on the refinance.Most service providers net worth is under 500-1M net worth and I just did not feel comfortable working with them because they would screw me over when I wire over 30-50k checks to do work.

31 October 2024 | 12 replies
I would think very carefully about ceding control over the investment given you are all inexperienced.
30 October 2024 | 94 replies
I don’t care what people think, maybe you do that’s why you calling my post a FB post.

29 October 2024 | 4 replies
If it really is a good fix and flip, then the HOA should be glad to get someone in to take care of it and make it better for their community.

29 October 2024 | 5 replies
This can be a useful tool in situations where a tenant is uncooperative or unwilling to leave, but it's important to approach the process carefully to ensure that it's successful.

30 October 2024 | 35 replies
If you can lever up 4x to 5x on a $2M property that doubles in value every 10-12 years, who cares about landlord-tenant laws?