
5 January 2016 | 10 replies
How do I find or determine the Cap Rate for a particular geographical area?

30 December 2015 | 2 replies
@Joshua Dorkin@Mindy JensenYou will undoubtedly be happier once next week comes and I have things to occupy my time again :-)As much as I enjoy BP, there is one thing issue which has been an ongoing inconvenience to which I have a personal solution, but not a good one.As happens to all of us, we often see similar questions raised by new members ... or members who are venturing into new areas of investing ... to which we know that either we - or in my case, most likely someone else - have already provided a long and detailed explanation.

3 January 2016 | 54 replies
To give a simple explanation.

16 December 2015 | 7 replies
Thank you for your explanation.

4 August 2015 | 7 replies
Have you written an explanation of the delinquency and gotten underwriting to address it?

16 September 2015 | 1 reply
Look for a few entities (5 - 8) in your geographic area who buy your property type.

23 October 2015 | 8 replies
A simple explanation of my math is im taking average rent from rentometer.com, and my expenses are 10% repairs, 8.3% vacancy, and 10% property management.

16 August 2017 | 16 replies
@Patrick Chamberlin By custom google map filters, I mean "layers" which allowed me to designate specific geographical areas, and I would input pins in to the map, and then quickly assess if I was in the target area I wanted, and if my investor group had properties in similar areas (since I geo-pinned all their properties), and then could quickly call them to get a sense of the local demos, rental rates, etc@Vivek Khoche Definitely, will keep digging in to find better opportunities.

16 August 2017 | 13 replies
Once you choose the geographic area, you'll know the rehab type for the area and then you can begin interviewing the right GC's for the type of work you'll needSecondly, I believe you absolutely can do this part time.

23 November 2017 | 9 replies
There are some "community" banks that can't lend outside of their geographical region per their charter.