
1 December 2015 | 14 replies
Whatever you do, make sure you use a good attorney in Oklahoma who specializes in real estate and understands investor transactions.Or, and I'm tried of typing now so I won't go into great detail, you could possibly do a Joint Venture with your mom where she (with you as a partner) sells the house to someone else on owner financing, gets a down payment, and then finances the rest at around 9% for 15 years, but you agree that you will find the buyer and manage the payment collections, dealing with the buyer, possible foreclosure, etc., in return for X% of the cashflow.

26 August 2021 | 3 replies
Hello BP, What are the some things/strategies that you've come across that have helped improve your business?

30 November 2015 | 21 replies
It might take 5 years, maybe 10 but the place is rapidly changing and improving.

9 December 2015 | 5 replies
Hello, my name is Kenney and I'm a beginner investor interested in networking to get as much knowledge about wholesaling via joint ventures.

28 November 2015 | 8 replies
Improve from there.The truth is when you're new you only need ONE source of notes.

16 February 2016 | 12 replies
I can't put my life on hold any longer, and I always file jointly for taxes with my partner, if that helps.I heard about the 10% witholding, and that it can be avoided if necessary, but I don't know how I'd go about rolling the sale of a UK property to another person in the UK when I think, for a 1031, it has to go via an intermediary who, I'm guessing, is in the US.

3 December 2015 | 16 replies
For a small house, I think you can get close to or at $50K if you remove some of the labor costs by DIY and ignore some things like permit costs, tap fees, other site improvements.

30 November 2015 | 4 replies
At my current status, I could only use stated income for acquision, and have limited means to cashout refi after improvement.

30 November 2015 | 4 replies
The tenant may not unreasonably withhold consent to the landlord to enter the dwelling unit from time to time in order to inspect the premises; make necessary or agreed repairs, decorations, alterations, or improvements; supply agreed services; and exhibit the dwelling unit to prospective or actual purchasers, mortgagees, tenants, workers, or contractors.

29 November 2015 | 1 reply
You may let them know that you had budgeted funds for rehabbing the home including landscape but that if you have to cover the back HOA fees you will not be able to improve the looks of the neighborhood as much as you want to.