
19 May 2023 | 2 replies
Read as much as you can and take everything with a grain of salt.

19 May 2023 | 13 replies
So if bedbugs come up in the future, there's no way the tenants can claim the bugs were already there.This probably wouldn't hold any salt in an apartment complex type of situation, because they can come in from any apartment, however for a single family house it would be the tenants themselves that would bring them in (or their guests).

12 May 2023 | 10 replies
Take any information the applicant provides you with a grain of salt.

23 August 2022 | 9 replies
First was a high rise entitlement and engineered plan design in downtown Salt Lake City, and the current ones are 250 build-to-rent townhomes in SE Idaho where I'm on "loan duty," and 9 build-to-short-term-rent luxury homes in a small subdivision in North Carolina where I'm bringing in capital through my commercial investing club members and handling investor relationsYou'll want to set up some patient money to hold the land while you work on permits, but best practice is to have a long escrow period with closing contingent on at least project approval

14 November 2013 | 24 replies
Thanks for any inputMatt from the Salt City

8 June 2022 | 9 replies
I'm not a wholesaler, and by no means an expert, so take what I say here with a grain of salt.

29 March 2022 | 5 replies
But every investor is a winner in a bull market, so take my story with a grain of salt.

26 May 2023 | 31 replies
Hey @Paige Harrison, Now I'm not a CPA or attorney so take this with a grain of salt.

16 February 2017 | 20 replies
Truth is, if they're worth their salt, then they can find their own buyers; if they're not, then they'll just waste your time.

19 June 2023 | 17 replies
While helpful information, any single data point from a 3rd party provider should be taken with a grain of salt and looked at as a small piece of a larger picture.