21 June 2019 | 4 replies
Rents are below market, but with the changes above, I'm thinking keep the rents as-is to prevent scaring off the tenants.

10 July 2019 | 7 replies
Hi everyone,I took a real estate class and my instructor mentioned he hates having his information in there so he has it in a trust to prevent people from figuring out what properties he has or information in general.Can some one explain how I can do this, especially if I'm tying to gain more properties.

6 August 2019 | 7 replies
However, the LTV limits prevent us from making that happen (best we're seeing for a cash out refi on investment property is about 65%, but our PenFed loan is at 80% CLTV), and we'd rather work through a minor cash flow impact today than settle for a long term (30 yr) cash flow crunch (of course planning to pay off HELOC before it converts to long term debt).Good luck!

11 August 2019 | 13 replies
Looking to see what property managers could do to prevent vacancies due to non-payment, in this case, possibly 50% vacancy.
5 August 2019 | 1 reply
Your pitch is you’re solving their problem and preventing them from losing the home for nothing.

23 August 2019 | 26 replies
You are more likely to have neighbors complain or have existing HOA regulations that prevent VRBO's.Look for areas and properties that have a draw to make people want to come to the area and property.Research your numbers and make sure you can cash flow.The loan will be a investment property loan.

6 August 2019 | 3 replies
There's a difference between that and not having a due diligence period in the contract where you can cancel and get your earnest money back.There's nothing preventing you from doing your due diligence before making the offer, and then foregoing the due diligence / inspection period.

9 September 2019 | 2 replies
As I watch some of the informational videos from the BiggerPockets podcasts one of the main things that are talked about are cutting your unnecessary spending.

6 August 2019 | 2 replies
Seems awfully legalizish and unnecessary... i understand the lender needs protection, but 20 pages?

29 December 2020 | 35 replies
They end up actually raising the prices of existing non-regulated apartments and properties, and have a very chilling effect on investor activity in the subject area.Of course, there are cases where some regulation is required for those nasty slum-lord types to prevent kicking out someone in the middle of winter into the deep, freshly-fallen snow, or if they won't fix the hot water for weeks at a time.But, IMO, the more government gets their sticky fingers involved in a legitimate business, the worse they make the situation; it is almost never improved.