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Results (10,000+)
Andres Sanchez Lease Option with Listed Property; Negotiating with Realtor
24 May 2016 | 1 reply
How do you not look like a sleazy investor looking to sublease the property to a third party
Veronica Boyd Richmond REIA
5 July 2016 | 4 replies
The $30 is the annual fee for the REIA and basically goes to cover refreshments at the monthly meetings and the holiday party in December. 
James W. Contact the Owner in Pre- Foreclosure or before Auction day?
11 September 2019 | 23 replies
That scenario would be the most attractive resolution for all parties in my opinion.
Tim Lindstrom Potential deal, but seller wants to stay 60 days
10 March 2022 | 18 replies
Think of this as getting two months of rent with little work on your part. I
Wilson Adams Convincing my spouse that REI is a potentially good idea
30 May 2016 | 35 replies
I didn't spend a lot of time worrying about my wife's part, I just focused on doing my part really well and the rest fell into place.
Matt McConkey Bexar County Tax lien
25 May 2016 | 6 replies
The worst part is Bexar County allows this to occur and taxes keep accruing, often times making the tax lien greater than the actual value of the property. 
Susan O. I have 8 more days to complete 1031 exchange.
5 June 2016 | 11 replies
So, what part is hypothetical?
Joshua Sclafani Strategies for Self-Managing Your Properties
1 June 2016 | 16 replies
Otherwise if the property is owned by you personally and the rental agreement is to the LLC then you would both be parties to any lawsuit and potentially both parties liable if liability is found against you.  
Nicole S. Borrow equity to avoid capital gains tax?
24 February 2019 | 27 replies
This is a  "Subject-to" transaction, hopefully using two notes.A seller is willing to take I/O for 20 years is probably 1 in a thousand and they will be taxed just as Greg is, make that 1 in 10,000.I'd bet Greg doesn't mention the other issues with a Sub-to, foreclosure, Greg can only foreclose on his interest, that could be paid off, the note to the first seller is pretty worthless, that can end up going to the state in a medical issue, then there are risks of bankruptcy, law suits by other parties, collections and servicing, deed transfers, insurance, liens and the list goes on, which is why you should not do long term subject-to deals.      
Mark Hower STRP with cash flow of about 17k/year - worth it?
7 June 2016 | 12 replies
@Paul Kessenich- in Nashville, the target market for these larger home is bachelor/bachelorette parties and other larger social functions (reunions, weddings)That is another degree of risk for long term.