
16 November 2017 | 11 replies
That is what we were thinking about by raising the rent $50-$60 a month and putting the extra into repair account.

20 November 2017 | 25 replies
Another option if the main reason for you wanting to exit these investments is that you don't want to do the repairs yourself any more would be to hire a property manager to handle all of the maintenance, showings, and rent collections.

17 November 2017 | 1 reply
However, now you (depends on how this Trump tax bill works out in 2019) can write off many things that deal with the rental property: depreciation, interest rate, fix and repairs, utility, traveling to rental unit.

17 November 2017 | 7 replies
We make money on repairs.

17 November 2017 | 16 replies
Property #22-unit Property in Queens, NYEach unit is a 2br/1baAnticipated gross rents: $3.6k/moOperating expenses (per month):- Vacancy: $180- Repairs/Maintenance: $70- Taxes: $295- Insurance: $135- Property Management: $180 (did this at 5% of gross rents because I can manage the property myself but I’d like to set aside a portion in case it makes sense to transition to management).

16 November 2017 | 2 replies
Also provide a great packet that includes the repairs that are needed as well as the comps that support the sale of the property to the investor, as well as comps that show what the ARV is once those repairs are completed.

15 November 2017 | 2 replies
I think instead of getting the gas one repaired I'm just going to get another electric baseboard heater.

6 December 2017 | 20 replies
Vacancy, CapEx and Repairs are all set at 6%, that seemed to be a reasonable percentage for homes built within the last 30 years.Great to be part of this community.

16 November 2017 | 2 replies
After walking around with my repair estimator to give me a rough estimate of costs, I came up with $55K for the rehab.

16 November 2017 | 3 replies
After walking around with my repair estimator to give me a rough estimate of costs, I came up with $55K for the rehab.