Noah Applegate
First flip, meth contaminated
30 October 2024 | 6 replies
I have not had the chance to test it for meth myself, but All things are pointing to math contamination.
Nicholas Foy
Investing in Section 8 rentals in Detroit
30 October 2024 | 5 replies
I've known investors to get burned because they didn't do the math.
Joseph E.
Nothing but Good Options, (but which one?!)
1 November 2024 | 6 replies
I would sell.While I like the idea of helping out another service member, I'm not sure the math will work for the buyer.
Teahjsia Frazier
Looking to purchase next property
2 November 2024 | 11 replies
Numbers don't lie, do some math by figuring out where you can buy properties with targeted amount of cashflow per month.
Mike Lawrence
Multifamily Coaching Programs - Are they worth the investment?
4 November 2024 | 26 replies
I jumped into MF as the math made sense to me.
Robin Smith
Soon-to-retire teacher looking to start MTR portfolio soon!
28 October 2024 | 4 replies
I am currently a high school math teacher who will be retiring in the next year or two.
Don Konipol
Why Investing in Notes Can be for Income, Capital Gains and Wealth Building
23 October 2024 | 4 replies
There are a lot of note buyers out there in the secondary market that like owner generated paper.. if you buy cheap enough you can still do very well with the higher returns those investor expect.I help my land flippers I fund do the same thing even today..
Thomas Gagnon
Questions to ask potential section 8 Tenant
29 October 2024 | 10 replies
That said it's been a great learning process and has been successful in the markets we've been in.Recently we purchased a 6 family property in Worcester Ma. The
Pretty Khare
STR tax loophole with a 2nd home loan
1 November 2024 | 22 replies
Most of the tax schedules follow pretty easy to follow math, (IE- multiply line 7 by 50% & enter on 1040 line 11).
Kyle Fitch
What would be my earning potential?
31 October 2024 | 12 replies
I would start looking at what type of properties you're going to acquire and where and then start backing into what they might cash flow and cost and where that money is going to come from. 10 year back of the napkin model/ assumptions1 unit at $60k is $18k down payment at 70% LTV and lets just assume it cash flows $100/month no matter what for easy math.