
28 April 2018 | 9 replies
Your best bet in the greater Phoenix market will be a four unit property, because it's tough to make the 2 and 3 unit properties cash flow with 25% down.

29 April 2018 | 2 replies
Timeline:Property 1 Purchased Jun 2016: Purchased for 5% down @ 255k, refinanced about a year later at @ 325k with some minor renovations completed, and got a HELOC Oct 2017 for 20k and had 20% equity in the property vs 5% when I had purchased Property 2: - Purchased in February 2018 for 192k and had it reappraised in March/April for $222,500 - This was super low based on comps and I asked for a review based on the brokers opinion of value as well and he said he could not review it- After this the lender informed me that he could not even do the refinance with the appraisal because my DTI was off- He recommended waiting a year or so until the rents from the new property show up on my tax return and to pay off some debt for the ratios to start working in my favorMy realtor provided me some provide private lending info who were able to offer NO refinance on property #2 but they could do a mortgage on a new property we were looking at for 20% down, & 10% interest.I did not have 20% ready to go as I was banking on the refinance for at least a portion of the funds and had to turn down the offer.Curious if anyone else has encountered these roadblocks and If I need to wait or if there is something I can do.

24 April 2018 | 19 replies
@Russell Holmes, every deal is different and with each one you learn more and more so don't bet yourself up.

24 April 2018 | 13 replies
These are things like: talking to people, getting over the fear of the phone, hard work , taking risks and betting it all, handling failure and rejection, perseverance, and picking yourself up off the floor, dusting yourself off and doing it all over again.

24 April 2018 | 4 replies
Thank you all for your quick responses, I will follow up in private messages later today - looking forward to us working together!

24 April 2018 | 13 replies
I'm willing to bet top dollar that college education would be a better bang for your buck than a self-study seminar peddled by someone selling you real estate "snake oil".

23 April 2018 | 4 replies
Your best bet may be to find a local credit union as they tend to have more flexible terms and higher LTV's than traditional big box banks.

25 April 2018 | 2 replies
this is a newbie question but here is my background...I have been a silent partner in flips for the last year on two properties which will be getting the principal and profit back soon as they are under contract or ha...

24 April 2018 | 6 replies
You’d probably have to do a cash out refinance, or you could use hard/private money.

27 April 2018 | 134 replies
I bet if you were to contact previous landlords, preferably ones before the present one, they would have some stories to tell you.