Christian Pichardo
Out of State Investor Providing Affordable Living Solutions and Short Term Rentals
26 December 2024 | 3 replies
If you are just carrying it, why keep it if you know you made a bad deal?
Charles Evans
New House Hacker, Need Tips/Reassurance Please!
29 December 2024 | 15 replies
Real estate investing carries risk, but this is a calculated move.
Luke Tetreault
2 years in, Growing Pains! What's the Strategy?
14 January 2025 | 9 replies
Don't over leverage and carry reserves.
Steve K.
Anyone Else Fed Up With Loan Servicing Companies?
8 January 2025 | 33 replies
I as a lender as part of settlement had our servicer unwind some negative reporting.As a sidenote I saw a post online somewhere else where someone who had an owner occupied home for several years relocated for work and teh servicer sent a letter telling them they are not in compliance with their loan because it must be owner occupied for the entirety of the loan even though the loan docs say one year....Again, servicer overstepping their bounds
James E.
Real Estate professional logbook example
1 February 2025 | 240 replies
Quote from @Carrie Baron: @Sean O'Keefe may I pretty please request a copy of the log book as well?
Zach Howard
Financing options for non-US citizens
2 January 2025 | 21 replies
It's a riskier loan given you do not carry a social security, no US credit & no experience.Due to increased risk comes mitigation (Lower LTV & Higher Rates)
John Friendas
LLC Mortgage Under Partner Instead of Me
23 January 2025 | 23 replies
If the LLC you own shows a loss (beyond depreciation), and you are an owner of that LLC, this would carry into your personal tax returns on Schedule E, page 2 from your K1.
Matthew Steele
Lost lease, tenant issue
4 January 2025 | 11 replies
I don't know NY law, but in AZ, you may send two certified letters.
Vanja Dimitrijevic
Cash out refinance primary residence to buy another
8 January 2025 | 8 replies
HELOCs carry higher rates than cash out refis.
Jennifer Fernéz
Help with this deal!
18 January 2025 | 10 replies
@Jennifer Fernéz I run sum numbers for you with our tool, see comments and pics below before refinancing and post refinancing .Financial Breakdown: Purchase Price: $200,000 Mortgage (LTV 80%): $160,000 Interest Rate: 6% (30-Year Amortization) Mortgage Monthly Payment: $959Upfront Costs: Down Payment (20%): $40,000 Closing Costs (3.5%): $7,000 Renovation Costs: $15,000 1 Month of Carrying Costs During Renovation: $1,548Total Upfront Required: $63,548Year One Rent: Monthly Rent Income: $2,000 1 Month Rent Losses during renovations (-$2,000): -$167/month distributed over 12 months Total Rent Income: $22,000 per year => $ 1,833 per monthMonthly Expenses: Mortgage Payment: $959 Property Tax (Assuming $3,000/year): $250 per month Property Insurance (Assumption): $100 per month Utilities (Hydro, Gas, Water): $275 per month Assuming 5% Vacancy: $92 Assuming 0 % Repairs & Maintenance first year because unit has been recently renovated Total Monthly Expenses: $1,676Monthly Net Cash Flow: $157Post-Renovation Refinancing Strategy after 12 months:So far, we’ve purchased the property, completed renovations, and rented it out.Next, you can approach the bank for a refinance to consolidate a portion of your initial investment into a mortgage.