
1 September 2008 | 24 replies
Parking is tricky too, so get there early, and don't forget to bring lots of business cards.

3 June 2014 | 15 replies
I may also collect rent on a credit card with 4% fee and let the credit card company worry about collecting from them.Additionally I like your point of collecting from them when they get paid; and I do that for one of my section 8 tenants and this seems to be working well.

10 June 2014 | 2 replies
Here my question:I am new to the forums but I've been stalking around for quite some time listing to the podcasts and questions etc..I'm currently broke. 21 years old BUT I have about $13,000s Line of credit from 2 credit cards with above average credit score.Im trying to fit the pieces of the Wholesaling process together so far I can understand this muchStart->mailing list -> get a potential good deal-> assignment contract-> find a buyer->add markup price->Buyer contract?

20 June 2014 | 3 replies
Great advice from @paul_timmins Dedicate a lot of time to study and learn , a little everyday will take you far Read the posts here in BP constantlyListen to the podcasts here in BPTake notes in a particular notebook or other place, this site is huge and at some point you will not remember were you read or hear it, so is good to have important things handyStart looking around your local area, for distressed houses, to have an idea of the market use resources like zillow.com, realtor.com, home.com, homesnap.com, etc. those are free sites and you will understand the real prices looking at recent sales (less that 3 or 6 months and less than a quarter mile from the house you are studying) take notes in a log, focus in an area you understand, don't look all over the cityDon't fall for the "9,998$ special offer just for you but we need to close in 5 minutes" of the gurus and the after sell "guidances"Print some business cards, Meet people in your local Real Estate Investor associations, don't be shy, try to connect, try to learn the ropes offering help to somebody, give value to them and probably they will help you and most of all be patient, this takes time

29 June 2014 | 2 replies
No personal debt (credit cards, car payments, student loans)b. 6 month emergency fundc.

24 August 2013 | 7 replies
If you can't get a HELOC, do you have any credit cards that have a decently high limit?
25 May 2017 | 15 replies
For funding your rehab project you could do some or all of the following: use your personal cash reserves, cash out from a refinance, equity access from a HELOC, construction loans (probably not enough value there for a lender), personal lines of credit, credit cards, money from retirement investment accounts, private money, hard money, or if your lucky maybe your PM company will flip the bill and you just pay them back from rent checks.

23 June 2017 | 22 replies
I have a rule: I put 10 business cards in my pocket every morning and I don't go home until they're all gone.

31 August 2021 | 17 replies
Now I'm trying to decide between Cozy and Zillow.Here is my comparison from what I see.ApplicationsZillow application fee is $29 vs $39.99 at CozyZillow application fee is good for 30 days for tenants to apply to other properties.Both use Experian and CheckrBoth allow tenants to add co-applicants.Cozy application has a few extra questions, like Drug conviction.Cozy allows references.PaymentsBoth accept ACH and Credit Card (with a fee to tenants).

10 October 2018 | 24 replies
Credit card debt racked up a bit and now we have a mortgage and wonderful school loans to top that off.