Jason Clark
This Landlord Stuff is Hard Work!
10 March 2016 | 24 replies
I don't like aggravation, and I have a regular job for a few more years until I retire, so I prefer to trade a little rent for peace and quiet.
Miki M.
VRBO's dead. AirBNB's not great. How to market a Vacation Rental?
22 August 2023 | 45 replies
(that said, I still list with them, and I'm moderately less aggravated now that I've had some time to get used to it.)
Ian Hogan
Will the housing bubble finally pop? When will it crash?
26 May 2022 | 3 replies
Lock In effect - folks who have low interest rates are locked in and won't be transacting which will aggravate supply issues further
Mattie Covatch
How long does it take you to rent a Room? How to get more inquiries for Feb. 1?
9 February 2013 | 17 replies
That really is aggravating.
Robert Newburn
Nit-picky tenants
13 June 2016 | 16 replies
Responding was aggravating to me because it was so frequent.
Justin Sheley
House hacking the most dangerous city in America
3 May 2017 | 8 replies
According the FBI, aggravated assault and robbery in Rockford have risen since 2013 by 30% and 22% respectively, with the murder rate only increasing slightly.
Nat C.
Poor relations with tenants
10 June 2017 | 6 replies
The one time I hired a PM to manage this property, matter severely worsened as the PM never chased up late payments and didn't attend to maintenance issues, which aggravated the tenant.Conversely, I have always been prompt with maintenance requests and repairs.Recently the stove stopped working.
Account Closed
Selling commercially zoned house as residential?
18 October 2015 | 11 replies
What I am getting at is if 15 years ago someone was pushing office and got it rezoned and it never took off and today there is mainly residential around it then it should be easy for a rezone.If the area has transformed into mainly office or a commercial corridor you will have trouble getting a variance now to change it back.I wouldn't in that situation as likely the highest and best use value is selling it for office or commercial.If it is zoned office do not advertise it as residential as that is misleading.We have had lawsuits here before where a seller advertised a certain asset type and then the buyer found out later otherwise and sued.Yes due diligence is on the buyer but they can still sue you for misleading them causing wasted time and aggravation.
Bryan Hancock
"Good Funds" At Title
24 July 2013 | 25 replies
Yes, the fee is nominal, but it was really more about the aggravation than it was about the money.I did find some statutory law requiring escrow agents to hold funds to confirm they're good, but I couldn't find anything relating to disputes over a title company holding funds per this law and it being argued that the contract was breached.