
12 July 2020 | 0 replies
Traditional insurance coverage, RV’snormally stay a flat rate throughout the year, thus you will stillneed to maintain full coverage.

15 July 2020 | 2 replies
Flat doors are usually the first thing I notice (unless there is still shiny brass) and I usually get a count of how many perfectly good doors I am about to donate right away.

17 July 2020 | 14 replies
However it's not gonna be a big cashflow producer in neighborhoods originally mentioned on this thread.Many 3 flats in that area are already at a low cap rate and won't run positive with a 33% vacancy which is what you'll have since you will be in one unit.

16 July 2020 | 2 replies
You will have to pay a flat fee which is usually around $1,000 and offer a Buyer Agent fee which is normally 2% of the sale price at time of closing.

24 July 2020 | 11 replies
The prices of comps around this house aren't in the toilet either.This would be my first investment property altogether and I'm as interested in understanding the process in this area as I am in securing this property.Thank you in advance.

18 July 2020 | 4 replies
@Shawn StitelerUsually if it's an equity structure, where you are splitting the cash flow, and not just paying a flat interest rate, then the investor participates in the upside of the opportunity also, the refinance proceeds and/or sale.

20 July 2020 | 2 replies
I'd definitely take those off and put flat caps back on.

8 September 2020 | 20 replies
I leave it at a flat rate all year long.

22 July 2020 | 6 replies
Just a standard flat fee of $1600 for processing and underwriting.

20 July 2020 | 1 reply
Born and raised Chicagoan and dived in head 1st in the market over a year ago, took a chance on a 2 flat all brick multi-family property located on S.