
22 August 2020 | 7 replies
Trying to get my feet wet and start my own projects soon.

14 August 2020 | 2 replies
Search on BiggerPockets.com under Education and you'll find numerous articles and videos on analyzing deals.

1 January 2021 | 11 replies
It’s definitely intriguing and something I believe I would pursue in the future, but I have an area in mind right now in Canada and want to get my feet wet here before I dive into other areas.

21 September 2020 | 10 replies
@Jeiby V.we are going to visit numerous properties this week.

14 August 2020 | 1 reply
Easton is a decently wet environment, so most anything that is suitable for your environment won't need watering once established.
17 August 2020 | 6 replies
If you get your feet wet as a passive investor with a proven operator, you could put your available capital to use today, gain a mentor for learning the ropes, AND build a track record of successful investments.

19 December 2020 | 8 replies
I have been enjoying the educational part of this process, but I’m eager to get my feet wet.

18 August 2020 | 67 replies
To get to $10,000 a month it would take 34 doors (just numerically - ignoring a slew of potential caveats like capital improvements, etc), and at maybe $25,000 a door to finance a cheap rental, you are talking $850,000 in disposable cash to buy those doors.

15 August 2020 | 1 reply
Our keys frequently travel in beach bags, get wet, and get roughed up by sand.

16 August 2020 | 13 replies
I routinely work with numerous organizations that have a 1000 or more corporate vehicles including LLCs where sequestration of liability makes perfect sense given the relative active business risks which are enormous and the relative costs of establishing and maintaining the structure are negligible.So again I say show me a small real estate operator that has been saved by an expensive and cumbersome legal entity structure that couldn't have been done it at least as effectively and much more efficiently through fundamental risk mitigation practices which disciplines one to act responsibly from the outset.In other words, running what are essentially passive real estate activities by retaining competent and professional management and a modest amount of insurance coverage (which should effectively limit risk sourced to the RE activity), and if you need additional coverage (for risk sourced outside the RE) get some ultra affordable umbrella coverage.Now I realize you won't be able to able to strut down the street pretending you are a player because you have an LLC, but it seems to be a very very small price to pay for not being played for a fool wearing the LLC trappings of a clown.