
11 December 2022 | 66 replies
@Austin Smith do your occupied and paying units pay enough to float the portfolio and can you hold on for a bit?

8 February 2023 | 5 replies
Not saying these are the numbers but say you buy it for 100k, turn around and refi for 200k you just pocketed 100k take 50k of that for another investment, and hold the remaining 50k to use as payments on the 200k, this will probably float you a couple years.

8 May 2021 | 4 replies
If you were offset in the cost difference at install by the tenant and still ended up with a warranty claim in the future, you might still be ahead in terms of overall cost.If you were to also maybe buy a box or two extra of flooring, it could help you out in replacing a few pieces here and there if need be- things that aren't the tenant's doing like an overflowing toilet that causes a few boards to sustain water damage - if you already had some pieces ready that's a pretty quick swap as as most of these are just floating floors you lock in place and the subfloor is protected by the underlayment.Hope that helps!

24 January 2023 | 49 replies
You are really my friend here.Biggerpocket totally sucks on this point, all those post 200 doors are gone now LOL.BP has a moral liability to educate people properly.many class B GP syndicator is screaming now as they have baloon payment in 2023/4 with floating rate.

22 June 2019 | 11 replies
A floating floor is a great option .

8 June 2022 | 2 replies
Make sure to get interlocking floating water proof lvp.

25 May 2017 | 8 replies
Contribution withdrawal should be used.It also sounds like you may have some money management issues floating money in and out of other business accounts or through them.

8 August 2020 | 1 reply
I think it’s possible to float a compound on sub flooring (think when doing tile), but I’m not sure how the rest of your house will handle it (eg doors opening..)Good luck

4 July 2021 | 4 replies
@Jacob Banner I'd encourage you to attend any nearby meetups.

8 February 2023 | 2 replies
Float down option.