
9 February 2016 | 22 replies
Every dollar I save in free cash flow now is hopefully multiplied 100 fold when I reach my goals later on.
25 October 2017 | 5 replies
Once you have the rehab estimate, take the ARV multiply by 70%, subtract your rehab estimate, and you will have roughly what an investor would buy it from you for.

14 December 2022 | 10 replies
Then I'd multiply that rate by 1.5x and divide by the number of rooms to get an estimate for each room's rate.

12 July 2023 | 4 replies
For those who MTR, what revenue multiplier makes sense to you for the additional work and cost of an MTR over an LTR?

8 August 2023 | 8 replies
Remember that number...you'll use it later.4 - Now assign each R/R to the partners, and total up the numbers for each partner.5 - Multiply each number for each partner in Step #4, by the number calculated in Step #3 (I told you you'd use it later.

23 November 2017 | 3 replies
This would be commercial so basically you take the net operating income and multiply it by your areas cap rate and that’s what it’s worth.

16 August 2023 | 6 replies
If you find an 1,800 square foot duplex sold for $360,000 ($200/sqft), and you had 2 - 2,000 sqft duplexes, you would multiply your square footage (4000sf) by $200/sqft and get $800,000.

7 August 2023 | 4 replies
I don't really want anymore buyers (unless they are in the upper price range) as I have a few and I can't find them anything and when we do its multiplies with just a chance of getting an accepted offer.

14 June 2023 | 13 replies
Multiply that by 8 units and you are losing almost $30,000 in income and that doesn't account for the additional work and stress these tenants are causing.If the units normally rent for $800 but you hold them vacant for three months of renovations it will only cost you . . . $19,200.I suspect you could empty them, turn the around, and fill them in less than 90 days per unit.

10 August 2023 | 4 replies
im actively researching as i type this post and something that i've come across is finding the AVG SOLD PRICE and the AVG SQFT of properties in the same area of my subject project and dividing the 2 numbers (AVG SOLD PRICE / AVG SQFT) to get the AVG PPSFthen, take the AVG PPSF and multiply that to the SQFT of the subject property to get the ARV.Would this calculation be a good method to better estimate the ARV of a property?