
21 March 2017 | 12 replies
As long as I get it for cheap ;-)But, and that's why I wrote necessarily above, if it's a falling apart 1800's building then you probably not going to get a class A price for it.

21 April 2017 | 27 replies
It's cheap where I live and I had VA health insurance and no vehicle payments.

22 March 2017 | 33 replies
One of my vendors says it best "Good work ain't cheap and cheap work ain't good"@David Grabiner

21 March 2017 | 6 replies
This is a pretty cheap area to buy multi-family homes.

26 March 2017 | 10 replies
If they're being cheap you can maybe offer to pay for the removal but I would mention you ARE NOT responsible for any leaks once they start digging.

27 March 2017 | 4 replies
P.S. i am currently a fulltime commercial/residential painter so maybe we can work out me painting some properties for dirt cheap and some investor wisdom =) lets connect!

25 March 2017 | 3 replies
If you brrrr then it may not cash flow unless you got it real cheap.

25 March 2017 | 22 replies
Lawyers arnt cheap.

18 July 2017 | 10 replies
If the property is owned less than 12 monthsWill lend up to 80% of the original purchase price and rehab amount if material improvements to the property have been made.Will lend on the original purchase price if the property has not been materially improved"I think you're right though, they may cut the ltv to 70 and not care too much.There are other lenders that have long term financing without seasoning, is generally easy to qualify (many don't have any income requirements) and have reasonable ltv's, but they are not cheap in rate or points@Andrew Hunt PM me and I'll point you in the right direction given your circumstances.Stephanie
7 April 2017 | 27 replies
My area as I said is cheap, and growing rapidly.Would you recommend I purchase a property with the money I can play with?