21 October 2024 | 1 reply
You are required however to have a license like myself if you are offing a service to customers.
21 October 2024 | 1 reply
Then you have ongoing costs like mortgage payments, property maintenance, and property taxes.This article provides a thorough overview of how much money you need to start your real estate investor journey.

21 October 2024 | 6 replies
@Alejandro Forte it sounds like a substantial portion of your portfolio is free and clear.

21 October 2024 | 3 replies
Would you like to hop on a call sometime soon and talk about the Evansville market and the possibilities here?

20 October 2024 | 13 replies
Hi Jasmine,A DSCR cash out refinance sounds like the best product for this.You can vest in an LLC and most DSCR lenders do not report on your personal credit report!

21 October 2024 | 2 replies
Anyone here handled something like this before?

21 October 2024 | 16 replies
Hopefully, the fines will be included in the title report.If it's ordered to be demolished then there is likely a condemnation against the property.

20 October 2024 | 2 replies
Having thoughts putting an offer in for a car dealership lot in the intercity (Class C neighborhood) that I would like to lease long term NNN.

21 October 2024 | 2 replies
Each state can be a little different so the details matter. https://www.omglawfirm.com/arkansas-probate-intestate-succes...Here is the pertinent excerpt:If you don’t have a Will, the default order of descent goes like this: (1) full blood and adopted children of the decedent, subject to any dower, curtesy, and homestead interest of a spouse; (2) if no full blood or adopted children, then everything to a spouse of greater than three years or half of everything plus dower, curtesy, and homestead to a spouse of less than three years and the other half of everything to other heirs (per this table); (3) to the decedent’s parents or surviving siblings; (4) to the decedent’s grandparents or surviving aunts, uncles, cousins, etc.; (5) to the decedent’s great-grandparents or surviving great aunts, great uncles, etc.; (6) if none of those intermediate descendents are alive the remaining half can go to the spouse of less than three years or to a predeceased spouse’s heirs; (7) finally, if none of these apply, all the property escheats to the county where the decedent died.

20 October 2024 | 6 replies
@Daray Olaleye im a newbie and building up my buyers list and i have a question that no one seems to understand, if/when i have a strong buyers list I'd like to co-wholesale/jv with another wholesaler.