Steve NA
Financing MHP and other questions
28 January 2025 | 4 replies
We've worked with local banks and been able to finance the three we own without any issues.I don't necessarily know if it's "beginner" investor friendly but you'll learn everything you need in the bootcamp which is the gold standardWe get loans with 3-7 year balloons and 25 year amortization typically
Treza Edwards
Real Estate Financing DCSR
15 January 2025 | 4 replies
I answered a question yesterday by saying "DSCR loans are like belly buttons...everybody's got one."
Jordyn Ohs
How much is to much leverage?
16 January 2025 | 6 replies
@Jordyn Ohsnot enough info to helpbut if you're using a HELOC for the down payment AND getting a loan, then you're probably negative cash flow given that's 100% leveragei would never do that unless i were going to refinance in the short term
David Jesperson
Fix and Flip First Experience
17 January 2025 | 5 replies
2nd home loan How did you add value to the deal?
Robert Stephenson
Older Investor needing help getting a Second property
21 January 2025 | 13 replies
The DSCR loan would allow you to qualify based on the rent you are collecting and get up to 75% of the value (175 x 0.75 = 131.25k, minus 20k payoff and closing costs.You could get a line of credit or a bridge loan against it to borrow money, but it would be higher interest.
Kylie A.
Buying In small towns
11 February 2025 | 11 replies
So they often will reduce the leverage of the loan (getting 65% instead of 75%) or deny it (which isn't as likely).
Sino U.
Can you recommend a good lender for house hacking please?
15 January 2025 | 6 replies
The good news is you don't need a specialty loan for a house hack, just a traditional primary home loan.
Jeanette Land
Next move for investment
21 January 2025 | 4 replies
As far as your next property, if you are already considering moving you will get better loan options + interest rates if you decide to live in the next property and rent out your current house.
Zhong Zhang
a multifamily investment case analysis
19 January 2025 | 6 replies
This vary heavily town to town. 20% down is great if buying strictly as investment but if you have a way of owner occupying I would explore that route and apply the 20% down to increasing value of property and instead using low money down loan.
Tayvion Payton
Would You Pay an 18% Premium for Seller Financing at 2%?
19 January 2025 | 8 replies
., Purchase Price: $475,000 ($197.9/sq. ft.).Estimated Market Value: $402,000 ($168/sq. ft.).Financing Terms: 2% interest rate, with a 9-year balloon.Unit B Income: $2,049/month (Section 8 tenant through November 2025).Unit A Income Potential: Similar rent or higher; Section 8 cap for the area is $3,234/month.Monthly Loan Payment (P+I): $1,386.Cash Flow Breakdown (if both units are rented at $2,049/month):Gross Rent: $4,098/month.Vacancy (10%): $410/month.Operating Expenses (37.3%): $1,376/month.Net Cash Flow: $943/month.Key QuestionsWould you be comfortable paying an 18% premium for financing at 2%, especially in a market where current mortgage rates are closer to 7%?