
10 May 2017 | 15 replies
I have a personal line of credit for $50K with a $0 balance.I can use a HELOC for a down payment on a conventional mortgage, but not the line of credit.If I transfer the HELOC to the personal line, what are the implications?

22 February 2017 | 2 replies
The current look back period for transfers that are not arms length is 5 years.

21 March 2017 | 8 replies
To transfer property, you have to pay 70 cents/100 dollars of the encumbrance (mortgaged portion).

24 February 2017 | 9 replies
But PPR helped with all the paperwork, and worked with the servicer to get the note transferred over.
24 February 2017 | 5 replies
I would like to transfer the title to my daughter so that she can sell it and keep the money.

27 February 2017 | 14 replies
If you want to call yourself a Realtor you have to belong to NAR.Zillow will probably be changing significantly because they have been relying on property transfer records rather than MLS data to determine sales prices.

26 March 2017 | 10 replies
You will find the manager, the monthly/quarterly/annual fee, and any transfer fees required.

23 February 2017 | 3 replies
I suggested that she do something to either leverage the property or transfer it to an LLC, trust, series LLC or something of the like so the property is not a target for people who would try to take out a lawsuit against her.With that being said, she is telling me that the condo association bylaws state that there can be no mortgages on the properties in the business complex where she owns the rental.

25 February 2017 | 13 replies
That perfectly nice tenant, when faced with having to break a lease for a job transfer or divorce, will come up with novel or bizarre reasons why breaking the lease was completely warranted and legal under Florida law.

16 November 2018 | 20 replies
The issue that I brought up with them is that land trusts, especially if the property is already in my name or company name and I transfer to a Land Trust really doesn't 'hide' the assets as they claimed, since they were originally in my (or my company's name), any litigious attorney can easily find out that I once owned the property and then go forward with suing the land trust as well.