
19 January 2025 | 10 replies
I'm thinking of selling my personal residence on a wrap, but I wanted to see what you thought about these approximate numbers (rounded for simplicity):$140k sales price$30k down payment from buyer$95k owed on my existing mortgage @ 4.875%$550 P&I monthly payment ($650 w/ taxes and insurance)Seller finance the $110k left w/ a wrap w/ a 3 year balloon.

13 January 2025 | 2 replies
In this case, your monthly payment with 20% down will have a good MARKET rate if your DTI works with a much lower month payment and no mortgage insurance(MI).
27 December 2024 | 3 replies
Our actual carriers used to be Secura, but they seem to be getting out of a lot of insurance lines or pricing so high as to have customers drop off, and we just moved policies in Nov. to Hanover Insurance.

15 January 2025 | 12 replies
Taylor sent multiple email inquiries to our insurance provider asking what risks their policy covered.

16 January 2025 | 13 replies
They cited insurance reasons, which could very well be true, but many residents felt it as a big "f you" Now folks from outside the community could argue this was an entitled stance from the residents, to feel they had access to this private land when they didn't, and that on the face is certainly true.

15 January 2025 | 15 replies
The loan is listed on the HUD and they provide lender's title insurance.

10 January 2025 | 11 replies
This ensures a clean transition of ownership and responsibility for insurance purposes.

11 January 2025 | 4 replies
There are opportunities out there but some strategies are risky. 1 - Airbnb (STR) comes to mind - very competitive, very saturated and becoming highly regulated.2 - Most STRs are transitioning to MTR so that market will be saturated soon if it isn't already.3 - Insurance crisis in florida is getting bad so those costs will eat up cashflow and short term appreciation.

27 December 2024 | 6 replies
I generally prefer higher since I don’t plan on putting in small claims, it’s basically just for catastrophic loses and the savings in premiums over multpiple properties for multiple years should balance that out if I have ever have to use the insurance.

10 January 2025 | 11 replies
It's an estimated cash on cash return given current rental rates subtract expenses assuming 7% interest rate, 10% management fee, 5% repairs, 5% capex and other expenses like mortgage, insurance, tax. it's a estimate to tell you what properties to analyze vs ignoreyou can see the are pockets of negative returns as well as pockets of positive return. this is to supplement the data @Devin Conley provided