
14 April 2024 | 9 replies
Additionally, Beaver Falls is relatively convenient to navigate to the city and other areas, a 15-20 minute drive to the airport, and easy access to 376.

13 April 2024 | 12 replies
@Candi Kham, Although your access to depreciation may be limited because of the passive nature of investing, you can still have a great overall tax benefit by purchasing right.

14 April 2024 | 885 replies
Of course, I am still curious for if and when you do try to access cash from it, how that actually goes - and also wonder Up to how much/how quickly you can access at one time.

13 April 2024 | 2 replies
One of the 3 bedroom units that was occupied at sale has a chair lift inside to access the upstairs.

13 April 2024 | 4 replies
There's been talk of how these will intersect and it's already happening in some spaces and I'm not talking about Metaverse Real Estate (Although I think some of that will make some people VERY wealthy).I'm talking about real physical real estate providing access to crypto investing and returns, and here's the crazy part...It has the potential to offer all the great things real estate does like depreciation, hedge against inflation and cash flow, all while exposing you to the high reward of Bitcoin's upside and decentralized nature.

13 April 2024 | 2 replies
They would need to be surveyed and have access roads built before being worthy of purchasing.Which would be time consuming and costly.

12 April 2024 | 4 replies
Give them access, let them pay me, or remove them?

14 April 2024 | 22 replies
If no then they need interior access to each other and having a second kitchen may be an issue. 3.

12 April 2024 | 2 replies
This means that if I access the HELOC, I'll need to settle the $130k lien, leaving approximately $114k available in the HELOC.My question is whether it would be wise to proceed with the HELOC now and invest the remaining amount into another multifamily property that generates cash flow, helping to cover the loans.

14 April 2024 | 25 replies
for some reason REITs have never been a sexy asset class, older investors look at REITs as a weird-bond and wonder why own something with 4-5% dividend when they can own Investment Grade corporates at 5-6% or even recently US treasuries at 5%, and young investors don't even know what they are.yet they acquire class A real estate, the kind you and I can't due to price, the kind that has the best capital appreciation in great areas long term, and they have access to credit at lower rates than us, or they can just print shares and get new capital for free that way, to buy more great properties, They can pay for the best management, they don't ever pay brokerage fees either in or out (have everything in -house), and they generally have much lower risk as most of their portfolios are leveraged at only about 30-40% LTV, and we have zero personal liability when owning them as opposed to the litigation headaches we get with direct RE, and right now they collectively are on sale about 25-50% below their NAVs at lowest valuation since 2008, as opposed to SP500 at all time highs.