
14 September 2017 | 7 replies
The prior management company has little incentive to deal with the property at that point and it's just time for everyone to move on.

4 October 2017 | 4 replies
condition, location, is what drives rent rates,, you won't know what can be charged unless you compare to others in same area,, might look like a peach outside but is a lemon inside.

9 September 2017 | 8 replies
When you run numbers on the portfolio of CDs offered by most places, you find that after 12 months the early payoff penalty on their 5 or 7 year CD about breaks even on the higher interest you get, compared to doing 12 month CDs over and over again.So if you're relatively certain you won't need a chunk of change for at least 12 months, after running your own numbers to confirm, throw it in a 5 or 7 year CD so at least you're hopefully matching inflation.

10 September 2017 | 3 replies
Do sellers typically share previous Schedule E's prior to the sale?

14 September 2017 | 21 replies
A lot of people will use turn key reviews you can see virtually every turn key company in america and every turn key market on ONE website.. without having to go into their squeeze page and get spammed.whats really cool is Brie also put up a comparison tab so you can pop on say a property by Smartland and compare it with one from JWB side by side.. and or any other turn key companies..check it out its a great first tool to start to narrow down your search.also from my point of view all these markets are interchangeable..
10 September 2017 | 6 replies
Yes, just make sure prior to close on the property you speak with them and see what their rules/policies are on the matter and be prepared when that time comes for the property.

12 January 2018 | 1 reply
Is the blockchain technology and those starting to utilize the technology now comparable to the dot com bubble of the early 2000s?

8 October 2017 | 4 replies
One way or another, and if nothing else, someone has to evaluate the property as to the probable cost to bring it to an after-repair-value that matches the surrounding market's fair market value for comparable properties - before ever offering to buy it at "such a ridiculously low price" (as the seller will term your offer at first), let alone, before offering to sell it at "wholesale" to your buyer (i.e., so far below fair market price at retail that the repairs can be covered as well as your profit and the flipper's profit in its eventual retail sale -- or 'buy-and-hold-to-rent-out'er's profit before they would expect to get it rented -- plus the title search, closing, and any tax costs related to your purchase from the seller (usually split somehow) - and finally, the title search, closing, and any tax cost split with whoever buys it from you.Now, that someone could be you (you do trust you and your repair-estimate abilities, don't you?)

12 September 2017 | 3 replies
Typically that individual will take less of a return on their money compared to a hard money lender.
21 September 2017 | 8 replies
I have a few questions.I went to sign escrow docs about 2 weeks before closing escrow, I was never mailed doc(fed ex would hv bn good ) prior to signing.