
8 May 2008 | 3 replies
The “As-is” part of the sale wouldn’t require major expense up front and the value could get back up there with a little TLC, which quite frankly, I would be looking forward to.I realize cash is king and if I had it, I would make the deal and buy the house.

10 May 2008 | 5 replies
TO me it seems that major repair/replacement is the most important: 1) water heater/plumbing2) HVAC3)Roofing4)Electrical5)foundation(I'm in Texas, terrible foundation problems)Does that sound about right to you?

9 May 2008 | 0 replies
But, that is not a major requirement at this time.Does this exist and where can I look for it?

8 May 2008 | 20 replies
I think the major battle will be finding a property cheap enough to get a nice cash flow on.

16 May 2008 | 10 replies
It would be one thing if they had a major medical condition that could be cured with a sizeable inheritance.

20 May 2008 | 9 replies
The vast majority of newbies fail in this business and a newbie has little chance of succeeding with such a large project.

13 May 2008 | 4 replies
The truth is that the vast majority of newbies in the rental property business fail in a relatively short period of time.

13 May 2008 | 6 replies
I am actually a psychology major and a social work minor.

25 September 2008 | 6 replies
Michael, if you do a major rehab it's possible to raise the rents but easier said then done....I just noticed the checkbox: "notify me when a reply is posted"' :lol: so I will react very quick now!

9 July 2008 | 18 replies
Kudos Joshua -One of my partners is a web designer / IT guy, and from hanging out with him it's clear you've hit a major milestone.