
23 April 2024 | 16 replies
If you are not touching mechanicals then there won't be an inspection until you go to sell or refi to put a renter in there.
24 April 2024 | 18 replies
I would not base any financial or RE move based on a bathtub, you know how that sounds, right?

24 April 2024 | 1 reply
Hello all, delighted to introduce myself as a seasoned multi-family investor and developer based in Canada, boasting a solid track record of overseeing the development of over 800 units.

24 April 2024 | 2 replies
The Greenville market is strong - high population and job growth - diverse economic base including manufacturing, logistics and transportation, medical and leisure & hospitality.

24 April 2024 | 6 replies
Hello everyone, I’m an out of state investor to Kansas City Missouri.I am based in North Hollywood California and I acquired 4 doors in the past year in KC MO .I’ve been buying Turn Key properties from my investor friend in KC MO.After getting my apatite bigger I’m looking to buy by myself in order to be able to create a bigger equity by doing the deal from scratch.I have a strong income and about $200K ready to invest.I’m currently looking on SFR and small MF (price range 80K-250K) that will cash flow and will generate long term wealthI’d love to connect with experience Real Estate Agents, Property Manager and Contractors.Thank you for reading my post and looking forward to connect and share more about my RE Journey!

24 April 2024 | 7 replies
My goal is investing in MTR, and I want to plug in the numbers from a potential property to buy and have as output "deal or no deal" based on the calculated numbers.

24 April 2024 | 13 replies
I wouldn't do just a condo. you could build your own triplex and convert to condos as a "development partner" or on your own if you aren't experienced and full return of capital. my suggestion would be to invest near the urban core over suburban deals and avoid older housing stock like columbus has more than 100 year old houses. anything pre 1950 I wouldn't touch

24 April 2024 | 30 replies
A good cost segregation study is engineering-based, the IRS' preferred methodology.

24 April 2024 | 2 replies
PMI for a conventional loan is % based and affected by credit score, downpayment%/LTV, DTI, and number of borrowers on the loan.

24 April 2024 | 1 reply
You can renegotiate based on your inspection/inspection contingency3.