
26 May 2024 | 6 replies
I am looking at 2- and 3-family properties in towns closeby, where the taxes and rents are different, and do not want to ask the lender to run the numbers for every option.If anyone can help me figure this out, I would greatly appreciate it.

29 May 2024 | 15 replies
As far as the lender goes, if I'm buying properties that qualify for conventional loans does it really make a difference if I build up a relationship with a specific bank vs just shopping around each time I buy a new property?

30 May 2024 | 9 replies
However, not every project goes into "capital expenses" - or, rather, there're different kinds of capital expenses.

29 May 2024 | 0 replies
Profit Potential: The difference between the purchase price of $93,000 and the sale price of $122,500 presented a clear profit opportunity.

29 May 2024 | 15 replies
I need a software/tool that can help me collect rent from 4 different tenants in the same property.

30 May 2024 | 10 replies
We contact them weekly using different forms of communication - email, text, calls, and mail.

29 May 2024 | 9 replies
more than likely you will need to speak to the land groups of home builders or the land and development groups of multifamily buying groups and most are going to be publicly traded. make sure you have enough housing units. if you provide more info I can help out. there's a million different niches in development and more than likely less than 10 buyers for what you are talking about in any niche. we just reached out to Greystar for apartment development site we are putting together that is a vertical development. we called their office for the midwest and messaged every single person on their team on linkedin. put the effort in and you'll get results.

30 May 2024 | 4 replies
HOAs on CA have recently swung the pendulum to cover cap ex expenses that were differed for years.

29 May 2024 | 9 replies
Different professional groups (such as narpm.org) can give you amazing training for that.If you are supposed to be supervised prior to you becoming a broker, maybe working with a sales company as a broker- associate would be the right way to go.

30 May 2024 | 43 replies
That's the kicker with class D - looks good on paper, doesn't pan out that way in real life True that.Paper returns are always different to real life returns.We also never calculate our time and risk as they aren't tangible estimates.D class comes with a lot of time and risk associated with it.And PM needs to be really rough in order to make it work.