
27 December 2024 | 1 reply
We bought a home built in 1900, insurance water damage coverage is 10% of the dwelling limit.

9 January 2025 | 21 replies
Information including but not limited to: - Median Sale prices for different property types (SFR, MFR, Condo/HOA, etc.)- Average days on market- Absorption rate- Historical data on rents and sale prices in the area- Population growth- Main economic drivers (industries, individual companies, etc.)- Crime stats... if you know specific zip codes/submarkets that you'd like to target, the best data will come from local precincts. - and more..I'd recommend remaining active not only here on BiggerPockets, but in other valuable RE investment networks that you can find - i.e. local meetups (meetup.com, eventbrite, BP local events).

31 December 2024 | 6 replies
I'm in Steubenville, Ohio a small town with limited resources.

30 December 2024 | 4 replies
My interests includes but is not limited to co-listing Airbnb, short term, medium term or long term rental properties just to include a few.

4 January 2025 | 14 replies
Really your reply is the kind of thing that has made Bigger Pockets so valuable for people like me with more limited access to a broad range of more experienced professionals.

1 January 2025 | 8 replies
In my state the standard contract used by realtors addresses this issue by allowing the agent to check a box specifically to limit the seller to keeping the EMD as opposed to going after "liquidated damages" like that.

31 December 2024 | 2 replies
Base the amount of podcast I watched, I know it's very possible but with limited finance, it seems out of my reach.

31 December 2024 | 49 replies
Next, your using limited visual range photos.

28 December 2024 | 1 reply
Ourcurrent approach involves identifying possible contact information for thelisted owners and calling multiple numbers, but this process is time-consumingand yields limited results.

2 January 2025 | 18 replies
Whether we agree with these items or not, the following are inflationary government policies: stimulus, student debt relief, tariffs, increased child tax credits, limited immigration, and big government deficit spending.