
16 July 2024 | 3 replies
Hi guys,My money partners are looking for a property that will generate them income when they are not living in Philly but will give them a place to stay when they are back in town.

17 July 2024 | 15 replies
So, you save money and forgive a debt you may be unlikely to collect anyways.

16 July 2024 | 3 replies
In the end, I likely lost a good chunk of time and money by choosing price over performance.

17 July 2024 | 16 replies
I am ok to leave some money in the deal.

16 July 2024 | 3 replies
I utilized (and maxed out) my credit cards to afford the materials necessary to renovate the apartments (I know bad move) therefore I cannot acquire a loan of any sort to fund the initial funds necessary to acquire a hard money or DSCR or rehab loan.

17 July 2024 | 7 replies
I am not making life changing money with either of these deals, but I expect total returns to have a floor in the 10-12% with upside in the 20-25% which is really good returns.

16 July 2024 | 18 replies
I’ve always been a money-knowledgeable young man; credit (760 score), stocks, roth ira, 401k, etc.

16 July 2024 | 4 replies
Hello in 2021 my partner and I bought an apartment in FL.The main purpose of the apartment was to invest our money to have it saved for our son to go to college.We have been renting this apartment to a family member who has been paying less than what we pay for mortgage and HOA,so we have been taking money out of pocket to cover expenses and so on.I decided that even thou the purpose of buying it was for college,I’ve had enough taking money out of my pocket to pay the HOA and expenses.My question is if I should sell this apartment or if it would be worthy in the long run to keep it and meanwhile just keep paying the HOA and expenses.Renting it to another person is not an option.

16 July 2024 | 7 replies
Fund that flip is smaller, but also less investors, so at least the deals are not funded in just a few seconds.Both platforms suffer from some of the problems that pretty much all of the hard money loan platforms do: not enough volume for someone wanting to maintain a large portfolio, not enough conservative 65% LTV loans, too may loans and judicial only states (where it's extremely expensive and time-consuming if you need to foreclose which can cause losses), and single note risk (i.e not diversified).

17 July 2024 | 5 replies
Private/Hard Money lenders do not lend on owner occupied properties due to consumer protection laws.