
10 September 2018 | 38 replies
@Gwen FyfeI agree with the other posters....do not buy Central Air and ask them if they want to be released....also....if the tenant walked through the property before moving in, they would have brought up to you that they don't see Central Air here, so where is it....so a small portion of it is on them.

18 December 2018 | 10 replies
I love that most sizes are readily available locally in case I need to exchange and all come pre-assembled (for the same price as flat packed, or less).My only wish is to find unfinished cabinets I could paint in the same style and price point as Lowes' Diamond NOW Arcadia cabinets!

4 September 2018 | 4 replies
I also have a good portion of the corner of my room that floods from under the floorboards when the rain is bad.

24 October 2018 | 12 replies
Their interest may be dependent on the size of the project.Talonvest and SkyMar capital are two brokers to look into.....Kris

6 September 2018 | 19 replies
Sell portion of the equity to an investor if you must.

6 October 2022 | 40 replies
I use a scratch-N-dent place outside of Philadelphia, PA (private owner, small company) and after my last appliance purchase back in April 2018, he said the same thing.. all appliances went up about $25-100 depending on size (so a standard 30" frigidaire SS went from $1500 up to $1600 now), etc.

5 September 2018 | 2 replies
I have been thinking about strategies of growing my real estate unit portfolio in size, but any way I looked, I was running into limitations (high LTV for conventional loans, expensive real estate with low cap, 1031) but nothing felt quite right until I came across the BRRRR strategy.

6 September 2018 | 3 replies
Hey BiggerPockets,I'm interested in starting my real estate investing with small apartment buildings (around 5-12 units) in the Pittsburgh area but am having a tough time finding real estate agents who excel with these property types.Any suggestions on generating leads and finding agents who specialize in this apartment building size?

5 September 2018 | 1 reply
HOA fees usually have a portion that is delegated to a reserve funds so when capex projects are required on the building like roof, hvac etc.. which owners do not have to account for..HOA fees is a cash flow killer..

9 September 2018 | 2 replies
I know it sounds contradictory however, a good portion of my savings has been wiped out due to some unforeseen family emergencies.