
14 October 2018 | 4 replies
The seller does have a title agency that is taking care of the purchase agreement and title search process.I was wondering if there are any real estate lawyers/title or abstract companies that could help draft up new leases/rules and regulations for the tenants we will be acquiring?

14 October 2018 | 2 replies
The seller does have a title agency that is taking care of the purchase agreement and title search process.I was wondering if there are any real estate lawyers/title or abstract companies that could help draft up new leases/rules and regulations for the tenants we will be acquiring?

18 October 2018 | 5 replies
“Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it.”
22 October 2018 | 6 replies
Maybe you can’t easily acquire a hone that cash flows 500 a month.
26 November 2018 | 4 replies
is there adjacent land plots that you could acquire from the city to add pads, utilities relatively easy?
26 November 2020 | 6 replies
I was able to pull out $125k of equity, but now that my loan officer knows I don't have W-2 employment I can not acquire anymore portfolio commercial loans.

15 October 2018 | 25 replies
@JD Martin Yup its in a low rent area but I have the nicest houses in the 'hood ;). I

15 October 2018 | 1 reply
Determined by dividing the sum of purchase price + closing (acquisition) costs by market value, a $100k ARV property purchased for $40k with rehab costs of $20k was acquired at about 60% of ARV......($40 + $20k = $60k) / $100k ARV = an acquisition at 60% of ARV)Recently, a beginner investor posted a need for 100% financing on a "75% ARV" investment opportunity, usually a viable candidate for private or hard money lending, with anything below 70% being better.

15 October 2018 | 2 replies
Once you moved into the house-hack and located a tenant/tenants, you can use your $50k to acquire another 2-4 unit at 25% down.

16 October 2018 | 16 replies
There are also other ways to acquire properties as well (e.g. owner financing, partnering, etc.).