
2 December 2024 | 10 replies
The minimum down payment for a property in this price range would be roughly $27K.That said, you also need to account for bank closing costs, inspection costs, appraisal, attorney fee, and title costs.Your scenario may require a seller's concession to account for these additional expenses.Investing with $50K is totally possible in this market but your journey may be met by challenges i.e.

4 December 2024 | 6 replies
@Drew Sygit, Last November Fannie Mae began accepting 5% down payments for owner-occupied 2-, 3-, and 4-unit homes.

1 December 2024 | 10 replies
The note investor who thought that even after he sold the note he was still entitled to collect the monthly note payments. 2.

3 December 2024 | 7 replies
But 3) Try multifamily specific brokers, crexi and loopnet, although 2-4 units maybe scarce. 4) A home equity line of credit is a good source of funds however it will generally make your overall monthly payments higher, so unless a deal is very solidly cashflowing, a HELOC may put you into negative cashflow. 7) Typically electric/gas are paid by the tenant - however this isn't true across the board.

4 December 2024 | 15 replies
Living in one unit and renting out the other helps you scale quickly because you need a lower down payment for a primary residence.

4 December 2024 | 8 replies
As with any insurance you need to weigh the cost of doing the repair yourself vs the cost of the premium payments.

2 December 2024 | 2 replies
The analysis is targeted to small time DIY landlords with 1-5 properties with minimum requirements to be able to do the following tasks online: Listing/Syndication, Applications, Screenings, Leases with eSignature, Payment Customization (i.e.

4 December 2024 | 5 replies
Then, I am using Rent Property Calculator and mortgage payment to estimate if the property can yield a positive cash flow.

9 December 2024 | 21 replies
However the property has a freeway behind it and hence no rear neighbors /more privacy.You’re going to see low or negative returns with minimum down payments in that area unless you’re going BIG as in much larger homes and much heftier budgets for design/amenities.There’s great cashflow on the Clearwater/Largo/Seminole/StPete side - you’re looking at 2 high cashflow buckets that I call Tier 1 and Tier 2.

3 December 2024 | 6 replies
@Francisco Pineiro To protect yourself when working with contractors:1.Start with a Clear Scope of Work (SOW): Ensure every detail of the project is outlined in writing, including materials, timelines, and deliverables.2.Use Milestone Payments: For a $40K rehab, consider this structure: 10% upfront, 30% at halfway completion, 30% at 75%, and the remaining 30% upon full completion.