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Results (10,000+)
Panos Coufos HELOC to Fund Downpayment on Next House Hack?
23 January 2025 | 1 reply
On property number one, I would cash flow $750 a month after mortgage, taxes, and insurance if I also rent out the unit I live in.
Shayan Sameer Questions About Purchasing a Duplex as a rental
17 January 2025 | 11 replies
I understand that I need to account for taxes, insurance, and other costs—Should I go with a LML and then do a refi later on?  
Diego Trujillo Dallas New Construction project
14 January 2025 | 2 replies
In neighborhood it is very important to present your self to the home owner next to you, this helps a lot to prevent misunderstandings. also this shows your professionalism.
Zhong Zhang a multifamily investment case analysis
19 January 2025 | 6 replies
The cost associated with insurance for not having 20% is peanuts compared to what you potentially can do leveraging your down payment. 
Marc Zak Cost burden of appreciation
5 February 2025 | 5 replies
Maintenance/cap ex, insurance, if a rental PM, bookkeeping, misc.The fact you have a loan means 1) leverage 2) equity pay down.In addition, there are tax benefits.So I will do some rough underwriting as an OO non-rental at 95% LTV (because FHA has some undesired consequences that make the 1.5% difference in LTV worth avoiding the FHA).equity paydown: 20% (using OP interest rate at 95% LTV and not counting closing costs). 
Bob Judge New Member Introduction
25 January 2025 | 6 replies
The right agent will have worked with Canadians before, will have lenders set up that can work with Canadians and will have a seamless process for management.Not only can an agent set you up with a GC, property manager, lawyer, insurance broker, inspector and everything else you need, they can analyze deals and put numbers in front of you.Your job as an investor is to vet the vendors they are providing and double check their analysis.  
Jonathan Small 2 Bedroom 2yr Rental Into Flip
21 January 2025 | 2 replies
The property was rented and generated $160 cash flow after mortgage, taxes, insurance and property management fees were paid.
Becca F. Questions for Ohio agents/investors and Class A, B, C in your markets
12 January 2025 | 25 replies
I flew there and walked the house, looked pretty turnkey rental grade): $1029 GFCI outlets, downspouts and guards, drywall, paint, bathroom vent$4615 (new AC unit since unit was stolen before tenant moved in, didn't file insurance claim because didn't want my premium to go up) $600 (water line, gas line, P trap)$60 lawn mowing$112  thermostat repairMy opinion is that Class C is better for local investors who are on site and know how to do repairs and self manage.
Deanna B. Is Real Estate a Better Bet Than Treasuries in 2025?
29 January 2025 | 3 replies
Planned energy-efficient HVAC installations will replace outdated ceramic heaters, reducing tenant utility costs, lowering insurance premiums, and qualifying for utility reimbursement programs—a win-win for tenants and investors alike.Inflation HedgeReal estate is historically a strong hedge against inflation.
Geoff McFarlane Sell our home or rent it out?
20 January 2025 | 7 replies
You have 3 years to take advantage of the homeowners exemption.