
24 January 2025 | 0 replies
The BRRRR strategy is a systematic approach to real estate investing that revolves around five key steps:Buy: Purchase a property, often below market value, that has potential for appreciation and improvement.Rehab: Renovate the property to increase its value, make it livable, and improve its rental potential.Rent: Find reliable tenants who will pay rent, allowing you to generate consistent cash flow.Refinance: After the property is rehabbed and rented, refinance it to pull out the equity you’ve built through the renovation.Repeat: Use the cash obtained from refinancing to fund your next investment property, starting the cycle again.Step-by-Step Breakdown of the BRRRR MethodLet’s take a closer look at each stage of the BRRRR strategy to see how it works in practice.1.

27 January 2025 | 2 replies
Metro Atlanta, generally speaking, respective markets 30 to 45 minutes from the City, will be tight on cash flow unless you implement a creative investment strategy, such as short-term rentals, medium-term rentals, or rent-by-the-room properties, or allocate at least 30% to 35% towards your downpayment if you intend to hold the property as a long-term rental.

25 January 2025 | 6 replies
Start by talking to a cross-border CPA and attorney to handle taxes and legal structures properly.

25 January 2025 | 17 replies
The 90% they are paying you back is probably 1/3 of what they're actually making by you committing to a deal.

5 January 2025 | 10 replies
Like @Collin Hays said, it is being driven more by neighbors tired of poor STR owners not keeping things sorted.We only look for places in vacation areas with a long history of owner driven STRs vs big cities and the like.

27 January 2025 | 3 replies
By that I mean community banks.

28 January 2025 | 9 replies
I got your name to show up by 'Quote'ing you and then removing all the text from your quote.

2 January 2025 | 53 replies
Just cause the market is "red-hot" as you've said, doesn't mean people will over pay by 33%.

23 January 2025 | 3 replies
The loan is with you, not with your tenant, so none of that means anything to them - in fact because you live in one unit and it's under 4, if you were self-managing you don't even have to abide by fair housing laws (at least on the federal level).

6 January 2025 | 4 replies
And what is your price point and are you looking for turn-key properties or something along the lines of a "fixer upper"?