
14 June 2022 | 15 replies
@Tyler GeorgeHello George,Sorry, I'm hardly on Biggerpockets anymore.

29 August 2023 | 3 replies
Adam:If you have not already read Steven Cohen and George Dube's "Legal, Tax & Accounting Strategies for the Canadian Real Estate Investor", I would suggest you do it now before venturing into partnerships or incorporating.

4 December 2016 | 17 replies
We need to manage risk — alsoexplained in previous chapters.Mortgage is best used: To fix the cost of money and loan constant For down payment on other positive-leveraged assets For appreciating assets For long-term arbitrage For “buy and hold” strategy"A quote from the Book "The Wealthy Code" by George Antone

16 November 2023 | 2 replies
If you had an abundance of cash, just buy cashflow like George Gammon did.

21 November 2023 | 2 replies
Hey @Sydney George - My friend @Joe Mueller has a title company geared toward working with investors.

16 November 2023 | 5 replies
.- The owner's/tenant's name is George, he is making an effort to be present at 1pm, so arrive on time.We appreciate your cooperation in following these guidelines and look forward to working with you.Please acknowledge the receipt of this message.

19 November 2023 | 2 replies
Quote from @George Mathew: In North NJ.

20 February 2019 | 2 replies
@George XuGood question for your CPA.
9 March 2020 | 31 replies
Regardless of what your lease says and no matter how 'well written it is to benefit you' @Laura George if 1) your lease is deemed lopsided or one-sided it is not enforceable, what you have is a beautifully written lease that will be thrown out by a judge and 2) regardless of what clauses you place in your lease regarding breaking a lease courts will require you to mitigate looses - meaning that if you hold onto the 1 1/2 month's of the security or pre-paid rent (dependent on your state) but you find a tenant within 2 weeks... when push comes to shove you will be required to return the difference and in some cases depending on your state or the judge of the day, you may be penalized - no matter how landlord friendly your state is.