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30 January 2025 | 6 replies
If you like to be risky with your capital maybe try putting it in some index funds, crypto, or stocks that you believe in and understand and then take it out when its made a good return and then use it for the downpayment.
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5 February 2025 | 10 replies
I used the funds to acquire real estate that appreciated signficantly.
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29 January 2025 | 6 replies
If you’re short on funds maybe seller financing or subject to deals, where you take over a seller’s mortgage or negotiate direct financing with them.
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15 January 2025 | 5 replies
I wouldn't consider it a heavy negative unless the street is super tight and parking is hard to come by or if the street is very steep/busy.The more desirable dense city neighborhoods it's almost kind of expected and off street parking would be considered a luxury rather than a necessity.If you get out into the suburbs I would say it's more of a big deal since more rentals have off street parking or a garage there.
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26 January 2025 | 54 replies
The funds can be used to pay for memberships, networking events, and one on one personal meetings over lunch or such.
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7 February 2025 | 16 replies
The approach involves using a hard money lender (HML) to fund 75% of the purchase price while having the seller carry back 25% in a second-position loan, allowing you to flip the property with little money down.
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15 January 2025 | 5 replies
. - Property type (single-family homes, duplexes, or small multifamily)- Min/max square footage or number of bedrooms and bathrooms- Desired cash flow or ROI metrics to ensure profitability- Property Condition (turnkey, light cosmetic fixes, or heavy rehab)- Neighborhood type (A/B-class areas for appreciation vs.
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6 February 2025 | 30 replies
Question is, is the person you are dealing with a correspondent broker who brings them deals to fund or someone from their company.
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24 January 2025 | 11 replies
Nothing illegal about doing that, but if caught, the lender may call the loan due and if you don't correct the situation or pay the loan off, they willstart mortgage foreclosure.3) You could also go the HELOC route to tap the equity in the home, but the 12-month owner-occupancy will also apply AND the interest rate on the HELOC will fluctuate with the Fed Fund Rate.4) You could do a cashout refi as an investment property, but that will be at an interest rate 0.5-1% higher than owner-occupied rate.Suggest you meet with 2-3 lenders to explore your options about the above.Once you have access to funds, recommend you buy a 2-4 unit with 20-25% down. - You can buy owner-occupied, live in one unit, and fix up and rent the other unit(s).- If you're handy, recommend buying a property in the worst condition you can tolerate.