
3 January 2017 | 18 replies
In addition to the two relatively HUGE changes, one of my units is a hoarding family with eight cats. (2 Bdrm/1 Bath) A quick walk through, determined the bathroom needs to be fully gutted and started fresh.

2 August 2018 | 31 replies
Immediately usable, fresh, and ready for consumption, but more expensive than if you made it at home.Because I could find enough deals around me that fit my criteria (50% rule), I never really considered the option, but I have been intrigued particularly for out of state purchases.It still seems a little daunting, but your questions have beat the bushes and delivered some really intelligent, encouraging responses.

22 June 2018 | 15 replies
@Darren BailinOne other thing you need to check is the number of dorm rooms available and plans for construction of new dorms, as well as school reqs on who can live off campus.What will happen is schools build more dorms want to fill those rooms and maybe requires fresh and soph MUST live in dorms no off campus.

29 August 2013 | 5 replies
If you have a 25 year old house with the original roof, the amount you should have for replacement reserve of the roof is going to be higher than with a freshly re-roofed house.

15 October 2015 | 8 replies
It is advisable to do your due diligence and ask about such things as how long have they been in business, are alternative assets their sole focus, are they BBB accredited and rated, are they a regulated financial institution, have they ever been sanctioned by any regulatory bodies, how many accounts and how much in assets do they administer?

28 October 2015 | 6 replies
I had a buddy that disabled the ac in the middle of June in Florida, at the eviction hearing the judge got mad and threw out the case and made him refile and start whole eviction process over and threaten him with sanctions if he didn't get ac working immediately.

3 March 2016 | 76 replies
@Luke Feds combination1. over paying2. if its a fresh rehab quality of work poor. leading to constant maintenance problems3.

20 September 2018 | 61 replies
Add to that, that as years go by I expect maintenance costs to go up as the rehab becomes less "fresh".

8 February 2016 | 11 replies
and yes i would do some weeding, plop in a few $6/gallon succulents from lowes/homedepot, and throw down some mulch ($3/bag) for a fresh finished look (or even better, gravel if my wallet affords it)does landscape pay off?

1 February 2016 | 35 replies
If you're not willing or able to work thusly, you should probably just invest in other areas that truly are "passive" e.g. stocks/bonds, etc.Yes really, she's a terrible tenant who got great service from us and who moved into our freshly rehabbed home that was in perfect brand new condition.We go the extra mile to provide a top notch product and service but there are limits on how much time can be spent on a passive investment.