
19 November 2021 | 5 replies
I am working with a lawyer currently thinking to give them a demand letter, but I don't suspect anything will change so long as I agree to pay them to slack off.

29 October 2021 | 3 replies
For holes, yes, as long as you know 100% they made them you can charge for them but as you didn't see the place on move in you might not be able to say with 100% certainty they did it.

29 October 2021 | 12 replies
Tiffany, in our conversation, revealed that she mistakenly believed that she had every right to stay indefinitely as long as she paid the rent.

3 November 2021 | 8 replies
. ($200k property can get $2000.00 month rent) as long as you stay away from homes that need flood insurance.

11 November 2021 | 8 replies
Any equitable division is allowed as long as you are not profiting off the tenant for charging for utilities (i.e. you cannot charge more than what the utilities cost).

2 November 2021 | 4 replies
I try to make it at least two, but have done as long as five.

29 October 2021 | 2 replies
Hi @Aries Li, Conventional lenders do have non-QM products that lend out to companies as long as it meets their criteria.

1 November 2021 | 20 replies
@Mason Jeffries I am not an expert, but from personal experience income from Long term rentals has always been accepted by my lender as long as there is a lease or can show revenue over 12 months.

29 October 2021 | 1 reply
Yes, you're better off maxing out your conventional slots and as long as the paperwork is in order, there's no problem with a parent LLC.

30 October 2021 | 3 replies
If the deal falls apart earlier in the life of the investment, yes, the capital investor stands to lose much more (and yes--the financial scale of deal matters, as you indicate too).I'm assuming that the "worker" probably has a little financial contribution for skin in the game (say, 5k of a 50k down payment), is also sourcing the deal, swinging the hammer, and listing/property managing for as long as the property is held.