
16 July 2024 | 17 replies
Tech companies are continuously moving here and establishing a footprint in Columbus as well.

16 July 2024 | 3 replies
If it was useable before (small ding) and is now destroyed, I'd take her up on her offer, but I'd also pay some of the costs as it wasn't new when she moved in.

17 July 2024 | 5 replies
This is great information to move forward with!

17 July 2024 | 9 replies
It's a smart move for both keeping more money in your pocket and making your property more appealing to a wider pool of buyers.

13 July 2024 | 2 replies
The investment consists of three building, 2x 3-familty units and 1x 4-family unit. 2 units need rehabs when current tenants move out.
12 July 2024 | 3 replies
Hi all,I had a tenant move out leaving over $5k in damages.

17 July 2024 | 20 replies
So sounds like with agents moving in that direction that is going to add another level of negotiations and put a ton of pressure on Buyers agents to get these fee's signed up front.One of the Agents that just sold one of my new constructions.. was telling me he showed a buyer houses and then said i need a buyers brokers and you have to pay me and the guy said no.

15 July 2024 | 7 replies
If not, she will eventually find a new place, stop paying rent, string you along, and then move out in the middle of the night leaving you with a vacancy, past due rent and most likely a mess and damage to the unit.

17 July 2024 | 32 replies
The only reason I didn't move foreword is because I was trying to build a multi family to house hack - they will only finance SFRs.Hope this helps, feel free to contact me regarding details.

15 July 2024 | 8 replies
I think if you set up a brokerage account with the same bank that your business checking account for the LLC is at, you can simply move the money from the checking account into the brokerage account and then purchase something. like USFR, which pays 5.4% in T bills with zero risk of loss or BKN which pays 5.7% in tax free Municipal bonds if able to tolerate some risk (this gives me a >9% tax effective rate on my cash).