Megan Mason
How to Start Investing in Section 8 Housing: Advice Needed
1 December 2024 | 4 replies
The process is pretty simple, but it does involve extra steps compared to a traditional rental.
Leo Cheng
market assessment of Kansas city and surrounding areas
1 December 2024 | 10 replies
I have also helped a variety of both local and OOS investors buy in the metro using owner occupant and traditional investor financing.
Jay Orchid
What would you do? Potential to HELOC on one of 4 rentals to expand portfolio.
2 December 2024 | 4 replies
Rates are typically higher than a traditional cash out refinance, however at least you are not getting the full loan amount + you have the flexibility to draw/tap in the money whenever needed.
Tika Sanyasi
When Buying A Condo what to ask? (Need Advice)
2 December 2024 | 4 replies
So if you are buying a property the traditional way, using an agent, you won't usually get answers when it comes to the condition.
Denny Knapp
first investment but not really as an investor
29 November 2024 | 1 reply
traditional Lessons learned?
Paul Merriwether
Has anyone heard of Scott Jelinek and his Slow Flip strategy?
2 December 2024 | 34 replies
Some use them as rentals.the biggest reason for doing things this way is a traditional bank won’t loan on property that won’t appraise at their desired price.
Raju Penmatcha
Cashflow properties in New Jersey and nearby
28 November 2024 | 3 replies
You can make SFR work but extremely tough in traditional sense.
Richard Nguyen
Experiences with SDIRA
29 November 2024 | 9 replies
I didn't know if it was easy to close a SDIRA and roll it back over to a traditional or not if my investment pipeline runs dry.Thanks
Jasmine G.
Financing first rental
3 December 2024 | 10 replies
As for finding better financing terms, look into portfolio lenders or credit unions—they might offer more flexibility than traditional banks for investment properties.
Sam Lewis
Why would hard money lenders trust someone they don't know?
2 December 2024 | 10 replies
Borrower Types: The Professional - HM Lender will cut sweet-heart deals to keep these borrowers around Experienced real estate investors Regularly engage in property transactions Typically have a track record of successful projects The Newbie - Charge Higher everything as the risk is higher as no experience Novice investors or first-time borrowers Limited experience in real estate Seeking to build their investment portfolio The Deadbeat - Only lend if the deal is so SWEET, they can't lose if they take the property from the Borrower Borrowers with poor credit history or financial difficulties High-risk borrowers May struggle to secure traditional financingThe lender will do an application on the deal/borrower and some standard docs they require are:Hard Money Application / ExperiencePurchase contractARV report – COMPS – See * Redfin*Pictures of Property – most people use Dropbox to shareProof of Funds – Down / Reserves (Bank Statements)Personal identification (ID or passport)But usually if the deal is sweet enough, they will do it anyway because if the deal goes south, there is so much equity/value in the property that the HM lender can't lose.