
21 February 2013 | 4 replies
if you r looking specifically for tax lien properties there is no one website that lists properties that have liens against them. this is actually how i invest. you need to contact the tax collector for the town you want to research liens in. you need to get the most recent tax sale list or upcoming list if its i the future. if the sale has passed you need to have them give you the results of the sale. which properties did have liens placed against them. if its a future sale, i would plan on attending it. you can buy some liens yourself if you would like. however, at the very least go there to record which liens were placed. once i have my list, i check with tax collector to see if there are older liens on a property. e. g. if you have the tax sale list for 2012 i'll ask if there are any liens prior to 2012. you do this so that properties that are coming close to the foreclosure date, you can heavily market to. these owners will be more likely motivated b/c they are close to losing their property to foreclosure. back to websites, most tax collector offices will either mail/email you sale list. also a lot of times, they are posted on regional paper (ac press, ap press, etc). occassionally, you will get lucky and they'll post the tax sale list right on the townships website. hope this helps. sorry for length.as far as foreclosed properties, you can just google foreclosure lists, and im sure you will find some. most of the ones i have seen require a monthly fee. you could also use a realtor, zillow, trulia, or other listing sites usually post foreclosures.

7 March 2013 | 11 replies
Find the offering circular, prospectus or whatever pitch paper they're using.

18 February 2013 | 0 replies
So I take a piece of scratch paper, write down my sources of passive income, guess what my passive income is from each source.

18 September 2019 | 18 replies
Other trades used blue painter tape to attach paper for protection for maybe 2 hours.

12 November 2018 | 32 replies
The other thing is you still will get some benefits b/c you always can still reduce your taxable income with paper deductions such as depreciation.

15 April 2022 | 21 replies
When I look up court reporters for my county, I get swamped with actual "court reporter" websites.Or is it something you have to physically look in the paper for?

4 August 2013 | 61 replies
He spent 1/2 hr on the phone to the borrowers for that $695, no paper work, no credit checks (I had to do that part).

17 July 2013 | 22 replies
Will correctly pointed out that you might seem to be currently breaking even on paper, but things like vacancies and any repairs and maintenance will put you at a loss each and every year, and maybe a little less so in 4 years if you refinance now.

19 March 2014 | 27 replies
Post advertisement in PennySaver type papers: We Buy houses 64.

21 February 2013 | 5 replies
The contract, for example, might say that you do all the work, your partner puts up the capital, and you split any profits after the house is sold, plus anything else you want to get down on paper.