Mitch Davidson
New STR Restrictions Coming for the Asheville Area
17 January 2025 | 40 replies
It's important to understand the zoning/code requirements and obtain all necessary permitting if you intend on operating your real estate as STR anywhere in the country.
Gregory Schwartz
"Am I experienced enough to raise outside capital?"
29 January 2025 | 32 replies
I'd say the skills that matter most is whatever skills are required to make it happen.
Keira Hamilton
5 Lessons Learned From Selling My Laundromat
22 January 2025 | 4 replies
.🚫 You can rely on seller financing to get deals done.A good number of the folks who reached out needed 30% or more seller financing to close.
Drew Sygit
New Michigan Law: Landlords Can't Discriminate on Tenant Income Source
21 January 2025 | 11 replies
.: I haven't passed this past legal review so for what its worth: Part of my standard requirements for everyone include income is at least 3X rent, minimum credit score, say 640, Clean record and no evictions as well as deposit is paid in full at signing of lease and 1st month rent is paid in full prior to handing over the keys.
Samuel Kim
Real estate professional status 750 hours doable?
31 January 2025 | 27 replies
The same goes for me and other folks who lean towards "yes."Â
Nick M.
Scam/fake inquiry of vrbo property ??
31 January 2025 | 26 replies
I sure have to learn the terminology and implications of certain aspects and im sure I will but it very much helps having such helpful resources as the contributing folks in the forum here.Thank you all for your support!
Eric Coats
Running STR #s for Newbie
29 January 2025 | 20 replies
I am guessing it is just kids tossing them in their bags when their folks try and get them to hustle up.
Chris Kittle
Wyoming LLC Set-Up and Recommendations
29 January 2025 | 12 replies
It's easy to obtain, costs very little, and doesn't require extra, on-going effort to maintain.
Adam Macias
Wholesaling as it is today will be a thing of the past.
12 January 2025 | 8 replies
Quote from @Adam Macias: Wholesaling as it is today will be a thing of the past.It’ll truly be strange to even hear people and gurus trying to make big money off it.The more people try wholesaling but then end up not having an end buyer or cancelling contracts or trying weird things like novations, the more all of real estate will be regulated and cause requirements like licensing to be able to transact more than just your personal resident purchase.Which I don't know why hasn't happened sooner.Here's all the states (in red or yellow) requiring a license to wholesale or at least have started the process:Credit: REITipsterI think licensing and regulation is a beautiful thing that should happen if you plan to be an wholesaler and do more than one deal... which is going to be the case for anyone taking this business seriously.Or even it being regulated to need a real estate agent to do more than one deal outside of buying a personal residence.I've had plenty of failed attempts with agents in pursuit of wholesale deals and I know exactly why, it's not because the agent couldn't find me deals, it's just not practical to think there's opportunity for the numbers a wholesaler needs to make a profit on top of everyone else needing to these days.Because the only sellers who truly can sell at a deep enough discount are usually those who ran out of time and just didn't do something sooner with their situation.I know many coaches and gurus will disagree with me but there’s no regulations on youtube gurus and what they teach either.If we look at the current state of the market in hot cities, the availability of online resources to the average homeowner, how many deals can you possibly believe are available at 70% of ARV?
Joe Sullivan
My Horrible Experience with Ron LeGrand's Financial Freedom
27 January 2025 | 21 replies
Financial Freedom Network I laughed at -- after reading the agreement, no comparable value for that monthly price -- 3 or so years ago, if value has changed now, my time-based disclaimer is as aforementioned -- and Legrand would do well to disconnect FFN from his name, as I believe FFN is now out-sourced, whatever.I empathize with you , Joe and the other responders, but when I read Legrand’s, and most of the other guru’s, contracts prior to trying a teaser product, it clearly stated in the agreement that if customer did not want the upgrade service for which the teaser/free product, free video, whatever, was being given away, then customer must cancel within the stated period of time, which almost always range from 30 to 90 days [60 days is becoming more common, as more folks forget to cancel]So long as terms to cancel are clearly stated prior to contracting, I don’t find it unethical, -- and real estate gurus have merely adapted a teaser or rebate marketing technique used in most every industry -- recently even Chrysler cars [try our minivan for 60 days!