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Results (4,880+)
Kelly G. final water bill Milwaukee -
6 May 2018 | 3 replies
Take the date of the start of the period and the date of the move out and calculate the difference, then divide the fixed cost by 90 and multiply by the number of days.
Tareq Salaita What’s your second favorite investment after real estate?
22 June 2018 | 76 replies
1. stocks - even though they are old fashioned, they get the retirement job done2. marketing - allows me to multiply myself 100 times3. crypto - there are some days where you can catch a down day and allow the market to come up and have some coins shoot up 20%4.
Reynald Jean what is land and improvement assessment real estate? please help.
13 December 2017 | 8 replies
In PA, assessed value has to be multiplied by a leveling factor set by the PA Department of Revenue to even be in the ballpark of what the market price is, so in most cases just ignore those for the purpose of setting a property value.
Reynald Jean what is land and improvement assessment real estate? please help.
13 December 2017 | 2 replies
So you add both of those values up, multiply by your county's mill rate, and you'll get the annual property tax amount. 
Jim Butcher Multi Unit Tax Information
13 December 2017 | 2 replies
You can determine annual property taxes by multiplying the mill rate by the assessed value.I've never seen a Taxable Value listed separate like that.
Alberto Garcia-Vergara My 1st deal. I need some advice please.
14 December 2017 | 4 replies
to evaluate, do the following:  (monthly lot rent * number of occupied lots * 12(months to annualize the income))  * .5 (this is a 50% expense ratio because it is a super small park and economies of scale don't kick in until around 25 lots or so...dependent upon lot rent) = you NOI(net operating income) for the park.Once you have the NOI, you can multiply that by 10(which is a 10% cap rate) and then see if you are getting a good deal and what you could potentially pay for the park.  
Kenneth Stump 1991 Mobile Home, repair or destroy?
25 April 2018 | 11 replies
If it cost you $6000 to repair and you could rent it for $500/mo you would make that money back in 1year. 100% ROI (there May be other factors like utilities additional MX and repairs) I got to that number by taking monthly rent and multiplying it by 12 months then dividing the answer by repair cost.
Jake Fugman Best way to invest $250,000
16 February 2018 | 15 replies
There are many routes you can take in your current situation, here is one. 1) Use current equity on flips to multiply your cash, to buy a larger rental portfolio/property. 
Robert Sapienza Financing my second rental
1 February 2018 | 5 replies
If you repeat this exactly you'll be cash flowing at $500 per month.At some point you won't have the cash on hand to keep multiplying so doing a cash out refinance will be crucial to your success.
Jeremy H. property tax proration
31 January 2018 | 4 replies
I noticed the title companies (the ones here I have dealt with anyway) take the number of days the seller occupies and credit the buyer in prorated property tax,To figure the amount per day they take a 1/2 year amount (typically in the county tax bill for 1 installment),   divide by 180 and then multiply by seller occupied days.My question is, shouldn't the division be by 182.5 days, or 183 days in a leap year?