8 July 2018 | 1 reply
I would try to get this lower than $217k IF and ONLY IF you have the backside systems in place to close the deal properly and are prepared to purchase the property should you not find a buyer.

23 November 2021 | 97 replies
As others mentioned a Windows PC will also do the job and at a lower cost, but if you are more familiar and comfortable with a Mac, then spend the extra money and get a Mac.

9 July 2018 | 6 replies
You are essentially paying points to get a lower rate with this lender.

14 July 2018 | 3 replies
If you are looking to lower property taxes you could try to argue your latest assessment with the county.

2 August 2018 | 27 replies
Your travel expense stays lower that way.

9 July 2018 | 4 replies
For the buyer, I would think the advantage would be in the $184k version since you have a lower down payment since there are both 5% down.

9 July 2018 | 7 replies
Monthly income (only rents) - 8500 (the listing seems to indicate only a single unit is currently occupied, and at below-market rate).Monthly expenses:property taxes: 1500 assuming this will be 1.2% of the deal value of 1.5M. current assessment is ~330k - https://www.sccassessor.org/index.php/all-situs-se...management: 850. thats 10% of rent, not taking into account placement feesvacancies: 425. this is assuming a 5% vacancy rate (may even be lower, market is hot) but doesnt take mgmt company placement fees.water & sewer: ~415. thats according to city sewer rates and avg water bill. no details in the listing. listing says this is not metered per-tenant.insurance: 375. zillow estimate.
15 July 2018 | 19 replies
Buckeye sounds really interesting especially since it looks like it’s backed by one of Bill Gate’s investment companies .http://www.businessinsider.com/bill-gates-smart-city-pros-cons-arizona-urban-planners-2017-11Looks like they bought the land around $7500 acre .It makes sense more people are moving out of CA to Arizona and other lower cost lower taxed states .

7 September 2018 | 3 replies
I'm not too familiar with that, but what you're saying is (using Brokerage #2 for example with 50/50 split and lower monthly fees) that once they take X amount of your commission during the year, you would then get to keep 100% of all commission from that point on and they would take nothing besides their small monthly fee?

6 September 2018 | 5 replies
I believe Fannie or Freddie have a green development incentive that could lower financing fees.Good luck