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7 June 2014 | 2 replies
So you really are looking for some kind of gross rent multiplier if you want to identify the best bang for the buck.
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24 August 2016 | 21 replies
It says to take your monthly rent, multiply it by 50%, then subtract out the mortgage payment, and what is left is your monthly cash flow.
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27 August 2017 | 15 replies
But if you can get a 5-plex up and running for just $50k which will gross $2,125 per month, then I agree with Cody rather than Michael (unless Michael didn't factor that the $425 would be multiplied by 5, every month).
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5 August 2017 | 8 replies
one bedroom apartments are taken mainly by transient men if you look at the rent rolls for that quad they're all one beds you will find that there's High turnover and partial pays another words some percentage of those four units don't pay the whole month's rent on time they pay fractions of it through the month look for eviction expenses that aren't reported turnover expenses that are understated replacing stolen appliances.a multi-family deal like this is priced as follows take the annual gross actual income not the potential income but actual income multiplied times .4 that represents a 60% expense ratio.
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18 October 2017 | 16 replies
I have it sitting on an interest yielding savings account but of course that will multiply very slowly.
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28 March 2019 | 8 replies
Multiply that by $750
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6 March 2018 | 32 replies
9 Times Gross Rent Multiplier?
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22 January 2023 | 22 replies
Out of 5, surely 1 will have experience with this or be willing to learn...Method for Calculating the IncomeLease Agreements or Form 1007 or Form 1025: When current lease agreements or market rents reported on Form 1007 or Form 1025 are used, the lender must calculate the rental income by multiplying the gross monthly rent(s) by 75%.
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19 September 2019 | 11 replies
Only multiply your flooring by 800 sqft, paint, roof, smaller HVAC systems.
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4 January 2017 | 16 replies
The way you calculate your weighted average interested rate is by multiplying the rate of on each debt by the proportion of that debt to your total debt, and then adding up that sum.For example, say your 15k debt is spread at 4k Car, 5k CC, 6k Student loan.The car is 4/15, the CC is 5/15 and the SL is 6/15.