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2 September 2015 | 30 replies
** Cash Flow (Monthly) ** Rent: $ 1,300 Vacancy: 8% (-$ 104)OI: $1196 Expenses: -$ 561 (all in for taxes-$2100, ins-$1000, PM-12%, r$m $780, capX $780, license $204) Net Operating Income: $ 635PI: $243 (based on 60k purchase) Cash Flow: $392 (this is based on 60K)looking to do costs out of pocket strong maybe on rolling into a construction loan (called by many names). if rehab costs are financed it would be $149$ cash flow relative to all other monthly expenses ** Returns ** Cap Rate: 12.7% Rent to Price: 2.2% Gross Rent Multiplier: 3.8 COC: 8.8% ** Notes ** Looks to have foundation issues back wall of garage.
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22 December 2023 | 10 replies
As you grow and build equity and a network around you, your options will multiply.
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29 January 2020 | 8 replies
Instead, it appears that they just decided to take the Market Value and multiply it by a certain percentage. 4.
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2 January 2023 | 5 replies
So, if the comp is located in an area that may have a 10% greater appeal, you’d adjust its sale price down 10%, to account for the Subject’s inferior location.4) Determine a reasonable GRM (gross rent multiplier) and apply that to any missing units of your comps.
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5 December 2023 | 30 replies
Screening tenants is a crucial part of being a property manager and if your property manager only uses the 3x multiplier rule; that is a huge red flag.
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6 December 2023 | 2 replies
Come up with your price per hour and then multiply it by the hours you think you will be dedicating to the project.
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17 August 2023 | 19 replies
Don't start with cap rate, gross rent multiplier, 1% rule, or any other metric.
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6 November 2023 | 6 replies
Some appraisers might rely more on the depreciated cost to value the adu or use an income approach multiplying the market rent by the average grm (gross rental multiplier).
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4 February 2016 | 13 replies
So they multiply quickly.Most states feel it is the responsibility of the landlord as there is no real way to prove where the bugs came from.
18 September 2021 | 3 replies
If a building has a total square footage of 100,000, with 85,000 usable square feet (which is to say 15,000 square feet of common areas), the load factor would equal to the rentable square feet divided by the usable square feet, or 1.15.Building Rentable Square Feet ÷ Building Usable Square Feet = Load Factor100,000 ÷ 85,000 = 1.15This load factor is then multiplied by individual tenants' usable square feet to come up with the total rentable square feet.