
2 October 2019 | 10 replies
I ended up having TONS of additional interest in the following days so may have left money on the table but, with other things going on, I was eager to sell and ultimately I think it's a fair price.

16 May 2019 | 3 replies
I ended up having TONS of additional interest in the following days and months so I may have left money on the table but I was eager to sell and ultimately I think it's a fair price.

4 May 2019 | 1 reply
Do you think I could move my stuff (just a queen mattress, table, clothes, and smaller items) into 1 of the bedrooms of the new condo while it's being renovated, or is this not practical?

8 May 2019 | 36 replies
You shouldn't have any emotional stake on the table.

4 June 2019 | 77 replies
Assuming all the facts are finally on the table at this point, I would opine that the agent involved is disregarding their fiduciary responsibility to their client (the property owner) and possibly violating the realtor(r) code of dealing honestly and ethically with their customer (you).If the agent is unwilling to present an offer, the property owner should get a new agent.

5 May 2019 | 0 replies
Handful of charcoal grills and concrete tables with a cover sort of thing The other plot has older playground equipment on it.

7 May 2019 | 8 replies
Due to the debt from a previous divorce I'm still digging out from, I'm unable to bring capital to the table at this time and had thought I'd just be a helpful Realtor until I'd built my own seed money after squashing my debt.
6 May 2019 | 14 replies
No one is going to give you start up capital/working capital with you having no experience, no money of your own to bring to the table and a mediocre credit score.
6 May 2019 | 0 replies
He brings his market expertise to the table, vendor connections, and all the legwork (ie if we can save a few thousand on appliances he is the one to go get them and arrange for delivery).

7 May 2019 | 3 replies
So it seems like a lucrative thing to investigate.But if anyone would be willing to share their 35,000ft knowledge or main things to consider I'd be interested to hear your experience, pitfalls you've found, tips you wouldn't think of right away, and any additional things to factor in when analyzing a deal (like providing amenities like tables and chairs etc) beyond a typical rental property analysis I'd love hear whatever you're willing to share and start a discussion!