
29 November 2020 | 69 replies
It sounds unique to have a bathtub with no shower, I haven’t heard of that before.

1 December 2020 | 8 replies
Quick background: 21 years old and Connecticut based. I have secured over $20k in just over a year in anticipation of what will be me quitting my full-time job in Market Research and pursuing Real Estate full time, Ja...

21 December 2020 | 15 replies
Definitely be careful but this is not a unique situation.

18 February 2021 | 21 replies
Eventually on properties held by the same owner for decades, the real value and the assessment are very different.For your property, the assessment is about 1/3 the real value, so the taxes will be about 3 times more when it is sold than it is now.This is unique to property in CA.
30 November 2020 | 4 replies
All these options have their unique challenges but not sure if those are worth pursuing than holding onto this property which may make me lose money over time?

2 December 2020 | 23 replies
@Joey Shanahan Are there any cities in which you might have a unique advantage?

2 December 2020 | 69 replies
—Since the home is unique we couldn’t find true comps in the area.

25 December 2020 | 11 replies
I'll make a different post in the appropriate channel, but my unit is a 3br 2ba loft in a unique building in the downtown area.

30 November 2020 | 5 replies
Looking at a few properties in the area, but I’m not too familiar with Sacramento so it can be a bit challenging although I don't want to speculate I think Sacramento has a unique growth influx: people moving from the north to escape the fires that destroyed many cities such as Paradise, an influx of people from the bay area who are taking advantage of the work from home policies many companies changed to and ran for more affordable pastures, as well as people from the central valley looking to come up to the "big city"No area will "stay up" once things "cool down" in theory right?

2 December 2020 | 9 replies
Arizona is unique in that the Arizona State Constitution specifically permits real estate agents to prepare instruments (purchase agreements, contracts for sale, deeds, etc.) incidental to a real estate transaction.