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Results (10,000+)
James Taylor New investor: Do Brrrr’s exist in our current Utah market?
11 April 2018 | 10 replies
Have you ever done this outside of your own market?
Russell Holmes Are there long(er)-term private lenders for owner occupied?
7 May 2018 | 12 replies
He doesn't know his credit score and hasn't used it for anything in years, didn't ever plan to, he buys cars, pays rent, and everything else in cash. 
David C. High DTI can a HELOC take out several other loans?
8 April 2018 | 2 replies
Separately, do banks ever do higher than 45% debt to income? 
Anthony Gayden A Big Pyramid Scheme?
16 April 2018 | 18 replies
Does real estate investing ever seem like a giant pyramid scheme to anyone else?
Bob Romano Should I buy it or keep looking?
16 February 2018 | 4 replies
Other people tell me the same, do not rent to employees.My theory is , he still needs a place to live if he ever quit or was let go.
Kyle Murray New to BiggerPockets
16 February 2018 | 6 replies
Let me know if you ever need any financing questions answered. 
Kevin Hassold Cash-out Refinancing in Texas
6 October 2018 | 11 replies
That way the lender can set their own rules, so again since non-owner occupied properties do not fall under Texas law, a portfolio lender can use what ever seasoning requirement or even have no seasoning requirement they want.
Paul DeSilva Banks are only offering commercial loans on my 2 family refinance
24 February 2018 | 16 replies
@Paul DeSilva:@John Leavelle and @Anthony Gayden (above) are both correct.Unless you have more than 10 residential mortgages, or the properties are above the jumbo mortgage limits or you're trying to finance the the properties with the LLC intact, then they should qualify for conventional residential FNMA loans.For the LLC situation: my strategy is to close the loan under my personal name (no LLC), then after a few months of "seasoning" to establish on-time payment, notify the lender that I plan to drop the property into an LLC strictly for asset protection purposes.Many seasoned pros will tell you that you don't even have to notify the lender that you plan to do so, but will warn that doing so runs the ever-so-slight risk that they may actually call the entire loan due immediately.
Michael M. Obtaining financing as an Corp/LLC
24 February 2018 | 16 replies
If you ever have a liability issue where the protections of the LLC would save you, I would not count on it.
Taylor Lacey Tips on Investigating New Cities for Rental Properties
6 May 2018 | 3 replies
Have you ever had experience with evictions?