
8 February 2017 | 6 replies
In many cases, they are precisely why the past owner sold - so they didn't have to deal with an eviction of a family member.You have no rights until closing, but as soon as you close, introduce yourself - with lease in hand.

9 February 2017 | 1 reply
I know am not in the best position to advice you on because am from a completely different region, west africa to be precise but i do know each state in the United State has its real estate guidelines and requirements and of course you need to sit and pass the real estate exams for agents of the state you choose to practice before a real estate agent license can be issued to you.

11 February 2017 | 6 replies
Also, to find ARV, I know Zillow is not the most reliable way to find comps, would you recommend working with an agent in order to be as precise as possible?

9 January 2022 | 21 replies
Or you can keep it simple but less precise and just use the broad approach you described in the original post, but make sure you are using population data for the entire region, not just the central city.

17 February 2017 | 2 replies
There are a couple ways to accomplish what you want to do.You should consult your tax advisor to see which method works out to be most advantageous to your individual situation.I would like to give you a more precise answer, but with taxes every individual has different circumstances.Hope this helps.Ed

4 April 2017 | 94 replies
Account Closed Yes, precisely what I suggested.
20 February 2017 | 0 replies
House administration organizations are the one who take care of our house for us and control our house in great and attractive way but before that you know what precisely to look for in home management company.

23 February 2017 | 9 replies
If the process is not followed precisely the landlord could be held liable for "illegally" holding hostage or disposing of personal property.

1 March 2017 | 7 replies
He's open to it, but warned that it almost guarantees an audit and requires added 'precision' on our part -- which could mean IRS headaches if we ACCIDENTALLY/UNKNOWINGLY did something out of bounds or didn't document something correctly, etc.My conclusion is if you're doing 'simple' SFHs, and/or you're not an LLC, or anything 'special' a CPA who specializes in Taxes and REI work would do the job, an EA who's good with REI would likely be better; but, if you want to do anything unique/creative, or outside the box or also wish to then have the business succession planning or have kids and want to have the business continue should anything happen to you...and all that added planning, maybe a tax lawyer would be best, or a Tax Layer who works closely with the CPA/EA...make sense?

27 February 2017 | 3 replies
I live in Chattanooga (East Ridge to be more precise).