
26 September 2012 | 8 replies
Service was off already, and utility company fixed it right away.So far they are paying the rent (no utilities, though, I suppose), but I was wondering what your process is.

11 February 2013 | 21 replies
As a Realtor in my local market, I still utilize different agents (even agents outside of my company) to help for our flip business.

8 June 2013 | 23 replies
I'm not factoring in utilities in these.

16 October 2012 | 21 replies
Risk plus more utilities.

10 November 2012 | 17 replies
@Rob K - you know that they can do things like hook-up utilities in an illegal manner, for example. :)

4 October 2012 | 12 replies
I understand the concept of OPM and utilizing hard money lenders to fund an investment purchase, I guess it all comes down to networking and getting to know the right people to actually make it happen, as is how it works in any field/industry.

19 October 2012 | 15 replies
Chris Masons the utility area was on the back porch, so in a comedy of errors the tenants had a bag of match-light charcoal laying near the dryer.

12 September 2014 | 7 replies
If you run the numbers on a very conservative side (10% vacancy, $1,500 taxes & insurance each, 5% cap reserve, 2.5% utilities, 10% repairs) you are looking at a NOI of $16,157.

9 October 2012 | 14 replies
But the security, lower fire risks, ability to survive weather (so long as it's not in a low lying area, LOL) and lower utility costs is a big plus!

9 October 2012 | 6 replies
If so then here is the cash flow:$14,940 :Annual Rent- $1494 :Vacancy @ 10%$13,446: Gross Income- $1,345: Repairs at 10%- $2,110: Taxes- $1,163: Insurance- $ 336: Utilities @ 2.5% (Covered for vacancy)- $4,953: Total Expenses$ 8,493: Net Operating Income- $8789: Mortgage Payment of $732.38 x 12 Months- $ 296: Before Tax Cash Flow.It is going to cost you $25 out of pocket every month to own this property - that is if everything goes well.