
7 November 2018 | 3 replies
I have heard of companies that will deal with the machines and the service and take a percentage of the profits every month.

31 July 2018 | 13 replies
It's not like a regular rental, so you will need to have days for cleaning/turnover unless you can afford a service to do it in a couple of hours.The type of home you get will just determine what type of client you'll attract. 1-bedroom condo might attract more business clients traveling solo (some of which stay for weeks and have an expense account), 2-bedroom might get more families on a budget, SFH might get more families more willing to spend.

29 June 2018 | 3 replies
The Contract servicing company("escrow specialists") is forwarding my payments to diTech.

29 June 2018 | 13 replies
Account Closed Well, maybe i'm not using the definition of turn-key correctly - the property was "near" turn-key as a purchase, but I didn't go through a "turn-key service".

28 June 2018 | 10 replies
The "ops" company provides services, has employees, and character of risk of loss is different than the holding company.

28 November 2021 | 11 replies
Once you approach 10 gpm electric power demands would be prohibitive for standard residential electric services.

4 July 2018 | 13 replies
Annual numbers are:Built in 1984 - Seems to be a B class complexPotential rental income $900K-$1M gross6% vacancy ($60K), $20K addition income from vending/laundry - no other amenities, $65K taxes, 5% ($50K) Capex, $28K Insurance, $16K contract services, $90K payroll/staffing, $150K repairs/maint, $6k utilities (tenants pay their own), $10K accounting/legal, $5k advertising/marketing, $100K (10%) PM (is that redundant with staffing?)

3 July 2018 | 0 replies
Looking for contractors for make ready service in City Heights.

4 July 2018 | 3 replies
I currently own a maintenance company here in the Tampa Bay market that services commercial and residential homes through either Realtors, Property management companies, and large REIT's.

4 July 2018 | 2 replies
Hi Eric,If you are talking about your personal tax liability (at the federal level), the formula I use is: NOI-Total Debt Service= Cash Flow; Cash Flow+Principal Payments Added Back (on debt service)-Depreciation=Taxable Income/Loss.