
23 June 2019 | 4 replies
I would determine this first, then approach your Tenant with the information, hence either their family needs to find other accommodations because it is violating your lease, code etc, or if no restrictions you may want to proceed with your idea, however, an 9 person household may very well use more than $200 worth of water.

26 June 2019 | 0 replies
I’m interested in buying student accommodation an obviously renting it out soon after... few questions however.1.

20 July 2019 | 7 replies
She couldn’t leave the mans side for one hours time in the last 365 days is beyond comprehension she couldn’t find a lawyer that would represent her at the hearing ?

7 June 2019 | 1 reply
My question is who pays for this common area reasonable accommodations as per Massachusetts law?

2 June 2019 | 16 replies
My biggest concern is accommodating the reality of having to continue in my current job until I'm able to reach a certain level of competency that is tbd.

26 May 2018 | 5 replies
When the QI sets up the llc aka the exchange accommodating title holder it is an unrelated party to you so you can sell the investment and buy the condo.

20 February 2020 | 26 replies
I have also studied municipal comprehensive plans, land records, zoning code, etc. to know where the next development areas are, what the future zoning might be, what sort of overlay districts might be in place so i can hyper target specific properties/acreages.

24 December 2022 | 1 reply
We added a second kitchen in the basement, a few cosmetic items, new landscaping, central a/c, new electrical panel to accommodate the extra kitchen, and ran additional laundry upstairs.What was the outcome?

19 October 2018 | 7 replies
They dont go out to open houses or to view property...so in that same vain, its always important to be flexible with a listing date to accommodate the weather.

8 March 2022 | 4 replies
So here is my process. 1- Open Zillow/ redfin or whatever, and type in a price range, 2 - Scan the states (sunbelt only for me) that have findings and pick the Citys that have properties meeting my criteria. 3- Check out the city on citydata.com (population trends, where they are at with state / Fed averages, etc... )4- If I like city-data then I will search and open the city's CFAR (Comprehensive Financial annual report) and see how they are doing with debt, reinvesting in the city, upcoming projects.. yada yada. 5- Once I got my city I will call 4-5 realtors and interview them (looking for ones that know how to "lift a skirt" of a home when looking at it, and can send video or photos)6- Call 3-4 PM companies and interview them, talk a bit about the market (rents/areas) and get some free info while interviewing them. it can be a lot of pre-work just to decide to dig in but I think it is worth it. 7- Remind myself to not overanalyze and stay away from Analysis paralysis.That's it that is my process... just interested in what anyone else's is, I feel I am too haphazard, I don't really crunch numbers, i just make sure the rent can cash flow (500 or more, pending funding terms)