
2 July 2015 | 24 replies
Yes Jon, this sort of survey question has been brought up before and in particular the duration of the hold part....we seem to only get crickets on out state turnkey or not.

17 February 2021 | 32 replies
In my opinion, jumping in without any solid business plan and without any knowledge of contracts, title issues, survey matters, repair costs, sale costs, HML fees, etc.

16 February 2019 | 7 replies
If you have them create a site plan, it obviously won't be accurate as a survey, but you'll have drawings you can use for what you need.

29 September 2018 | 6 replies
Hey BPers!For those that don't know, I'm a real estate-oriented programmer. Okay...so what does that even mean? :SBasically, I want to give back to this awesome community by creating a free desktop app (i.e. open sour...

26 July 2020 | 76 replies
Mindy Jensen My understanding is that NACA pays for title and survey for the seller if the seller agrees to use NACA (or its vendor) for the title company.

24 May 2007 | 0 replies
An extensive land and timber survey has been completed.

29 February 2012 | 6 replies
You could be required to survey the house and a residential area from the total amount to meet lending guidelines, depending of the loan program.

27 February 2013 | 103 replies
You should also ask for a legal survey, check County for flood zone, zoning, utility location and known geological/soils issues, protective trees (as we have in CA), etc.

8 May 2016 | 145 replies
I worked with an investor over the weekend and I proved that the home was over priced by having each guest that visited the open house fill out a survey.