
9 November 2017 | 4 replies
The existing tenants have mentioned separately (this is an up/down duplex) of smell of mold.This is not difficult to believe if in fact there are these obvious cracks on the home exterior.There is no doubt water/moisture is getting into the home and creating a condition for mold to grow.We had a structural engineer out to do our buyer’s inspection yesterday, report is due out later this evening (11/04/17).Verbal communication while on site, indicated a mutually shared concern over these cracks.The roof appears fine.A wall in the backyard will need replacing as the soil weight has almost pushed this wall over and it is only a matter of time before this thing comes falling over.Boiler may need replaced, windows as there is some clear cold.These are just concerns at this time but inspection report will lay all this out once received later today.I should have been a little smarter in not agreeing to a change in inspection objection deadline when it was presented by seller.My buyer’s agent and I should really have talked this one over, as I realize now that, it left us with only hours after inspection to come up with our inspection objection response and to be honest I will not have time to get bids for any of the extensive repair items which I do not doubt will be confirmed in the report received later today.Seeking any advice that you can give on the following: Would you proceed with purchase of the above detailed home?

4 November 2017 | 1 reply
find out what you are willing to pay for the property then make contact with the owners and communicate your willingness to buy

12 November 2017 | 14 replies
Your experience underscores the importance of me communicating with my cleaning staff regarding photographing any damages they notice, and making sure I have proper documentation for all services (which is not only beneficial for potential claims, but also for tax time!).

6 November 2017 | 14 replies
I sent the below response this morning and will end all go forward communication with this individual.

5 November 2017 | 2 replies
Or, if you have proof of any communication from the landlord indicating the same, then you might have some recourse.

15 November 2017 | 14 replies
I have been communicating to them via text messages so far, and also receiving payments with extra charge for being late.

10 August 2019 | 35 replies
The key difference in my experience vs yours is communication.

14 November 2017 | 5 replies
Please read my profile for more about me, and what I'm searching for.I look forward to communicating with BiggerPocket members!

14 November 2017 | 3 replies
They want you to get your license though because your worth is significantly lower while you are not licensed because you're not allowed to communicate with other Agents about most things they might be calling the office about, nor accessing homes, nor talking to clients in anything other than a receptionist capacity.If they find you valuable once you start, they might ask you to show homes for them, or to do some of the work that they like the least.

16 November 2017 | 7 replies
., but I seem to have trouble communicating to my agent exactly what criteria I want sent to my inbox.