
4 March 2019 | 12 replies
They usually stick to just B neighborhoods- especially Bridge from KC- so stalk them and just buy next to where they do :) Hope this helps?

17 February 2023 | 25 replies
I've heard that they don't accept new clients with fewer than 5 properties if they weren't referred from Bridge (but I have not confirmed this with them).Voepel's current fees are:Monthly fee= 8-10%Leasing fee : 50% months rentRenewal fee : 25%While fees are important, I'd have a list of questions to ask them to better informed on how they do things and if they align with what you want.I got mine from Chris Clothier's turnkey book, but I'm sure there are plenty on BP too.

12 December 2023 | 6 replies
To answer your questions about 'in the meantime', you may have to look at creative ways, HELOC on one of the properties, bring in an equity partner on the Orlando home that can provide a bridge loan until you sell or refi?

13 September 2023 | 6 replies
Bridge loan, if so where do get those?

6 December 2018 | 18 replies
Jack there is a 6% fund in Oregon that is basically bullet proof.. and you can pull your funds with i think 30 days notice. check out Iron Bridge in Portland ... and if you would like a persona referral happy to do it..

10 December 2009 | 23 replies
The last thing you want to do is burn alot of bridges by showing your new found buyers a bunch of crap.6.

24 March 2023 | 69 replies
I was originally introduced to HP as a bridge.
10 May 2018 | 3 replies
What you have is the cash for a short term "bridge loan" for an investor that needs just a couple thousand to complete a project.

26 July 2023 | 15 replies
We are also a BRRRR specialist in that we have complementary programs DSCR and a bridge/hard money team, so we do a lot of "double deals" where we in a BRRRR we finance the purchase through hard money loan and then refi once the property is rehabbed and rented, all in one house (makes it much easier - don't have to go through the whole financing process again so quickly!)

5 January 2024 | 12 replies
Originally, I used a local bank because they didn't charge for wires or cashiers checks to close on properties, but once I built a small portfolio and tenants were paying with checks, I realized the cost savings for the occasional closing wasn't worth the fact that they didn't have mobile deposit or an app.And especially when you are starting off, and money will likely be primarily coming from your personal account, it is nice to be able to simply hop on the app, transfer $100k from personal to business account immediately, then wire the money to the title company from the app to be ready for closing.As you get larger, your bank may matter more, as some lenders will require you to hold the bank account for that asset at their bank, but that is a bridge you will be crossing much later on, typically.