Eddie Starr
House hacking and reusing?
12 March 2020 | 5 replies
If you don’t pcs you must show how you out-grew your house. the easy way is getting married or having a child but you may have to make a case if you stay single and still want to move out.Now if you refinance out of your va as you suggested you will not have to worry about these rules however it maybe more painful than you think to refinance out of a va as the percentage may rise significantly for a conventional on top of the National average probably going up by the time you refi.disclaimer- my phone is struggling on grammar corrections and capitalization so forgive the unprofessional view of this post.
Michael Jones
Watch out for Private Lender Scam
25 February 2020 | 31 replies
The scammer does not want to reveal phone number, sex or accent. 3) "How do you intend to receive funds" Irrelevant a this time. is intended to give you the illusion of getting the money. 4) Bad English grammar.
Jean-Paul E. Gagnon
Should I be worried about my DTI?
12 March 2020 | 13 replies
A few red flags to watch out for would be:- Asking for a large loan application fee or other fees upfront - Unusually low interest rates for a hard money/private lender (real hard money/private lenders aren’t loaning money at 4-5% but fake ones usually advertise those rates)- Email communications with really bad English/grammar indicating the sender might be from out of the country- Claiming they loan nationwide in all 50 states (most non-bank, hard money/private lenders operate in only certain states and don’t lend nationwide)- Claiming they can do loans from $5,000 to $50 million (most lenders that will loan you $5,000 can’t do a loan for $50 million, and most lenders that can do a loan for $50 million aren’t going to bother doing a loan for $5,000)- Offering to send you a photo of their drivers license (fake lenders tend do this to convince you they’re legit but I guarantee you it’s not their license they’re showing you and a real lender would never do this)- Not caring about your qualifications or the merits of the deal (basically willing to “approve” you no matter what you bring to them since they know they’ll never actually fund it)- Terms that seem just way too good to be trueThat’s just a few things to watch out for.
Tyreon Brown
How do I start becoming a real estate agent
26 February 2020 | 12 replies
Also, pay close attention to your grammar.
Stephen Foltin
Should I Back Out of New Build Because of Corona ?????
8 July 2020 | 35 replies
Edits: grammar
Demitrius Halliburton
New to real estate investing but not to construction
21 April 2020 | 3 replies
Excuse my incorrect grammar I did not proof read lol
Franklin De leon
How do I get a Loan?
1 July 2020 | 4 replies
Excuse my grammar I'm not from here :)
Steven C.
Chicago costs for House Flipping Spreadsheet
20 June 2020 | 8 replies
Aside from the grammar and clichés.
Luke Carl
Why Bad Reviews are a Good Thing in Short Term Rental
12 January 2021 | 27 replies
Bad grammar and horrible English in a review (and nearly all bad reviews have this) are laughable.
Frank Hinck
Will Minnesota cost reductions hit when COVID evictions stop?
10 August 2020 | 5 replies
These are just the Grammar-School Economics level of it all, creating housing market price support.