
20 February 2015 | 24 replies
When we have had to travel the bank has held the checks and deposited them on the first themselves.Electronic payment requires action from the tenant in that they have to either initiate a one time payment each month on the first or they have to schedule a recurring payment for the first.

10 January 2016 | 22 replies
However, someone in this triangle...either husband or wife or parents, must have verifiable US income, and sufficient income, to boot.The better way to approach this is to say "Here is my income (or the income of my wife or our parents, minus recurring obligations).

21 February 2015 | 14 replies
They only charge .25 cents per transaction and you can set up recurring payment requests.

7 March 2015 | 174 replies
Ben Leybovich .... maybe C class 6 cap and you better check the numbers twice for recurring capex hung on the balance sheet:))

11 November 2013 | 8 replies
If you only have $5K and no recurring budget beyond that you should be looking at lots of the low hanging free/cheap fruit.Online stuff is usually cheap or free so get on that stuff.Bandit signs are cheap, but have drawbacks (such as being illegal generally) but lots of people do well with them.Probably the best use of the money will be direct mail.

11 March 2015 | 126 replies
Ben's stated facts say copper pipes wear out and he has recurring (20 yr.) maintenance to replace his copper pipes with other copper pipes.

10 April 2014 | 23 replies
To extend this example further, you say you have about $650 per month in net cash flow after you pay the recurring costs each month.

18 April 2020 | 2 replies
Guidelines usually direct seller contributions toward one-time or "non- recurring" buyer costs (escrow fees, title insurance, discount loan points, or loan origination charges).

7 May 2021 | 2 replies
We continuously have pest issued with our duplex in Watts, CA. We have spent several $$$ patching up holes and cracks around the property. Does California require landlords to pay for both internal and exterior pest m...

30 October 2016 | 10 replies
An “annual valuation period” is an annually recurring period of not more than 90 days that begins no later than the anniversary of an entity’s initial valuation date.