Skip to content
×
Try PRO Free Today!
BiggerPockets Pro offers you a comprehensive suite of tools and resources
Market and Deal Finder Tools
Deal Analysis Calculators
Property Management Software
Exclusive discounts to Home Depot, RentRedi, and more
$0
7 days free
$828/yr or $69/mo when billed monthly.
$390/yr or $32.5/mo when billed annually.
7 days free. Cancel anytime.
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here
Pick markets, find deals, analyze and manage properties. Try BiggerPockets PRO.
x
Results (9,939+)
Jason Bohling How Are Investors Making Money In The Boise Market?
3 November 2021 | 15 replies
Occasionally I will get one that I can BRRR although they are hard to find right now.
Amey Phatale Zillow's data show real estate crash is here? Any insight?
10 November 2021 | 48 replies
The program was never profitable, and became more bloated as it grew.
Ron Rohrssen Viewing No Show - Big Frustration
7 July 2021 | 7 replies
My listings were in Craigslist, Facebook, and the occasional poster at the grocery store.Have people really become this much less considerate?
Adam Kruse Boyfriend Squatter alert
6 August 2021 | 32 replies
Yes, the lease says 48 hours but the intent was just that you would have occasional visitors.
Joseph Barbaretta How much to give a GC upfront?
30 November 2015 | 79 replies
Occasionally I'll let them draw early if they're tight, but only for work that's been completed. 
Ron Thomas House prices will never outpace inflation over time, its impossible.
4 June 2018 | 206 replies
Folks, April of 2058 is not all that far away.Of course this would never happen, people have to pay taxes and eat food and buy diapers and indulge in the occasional lap dance, among other things.
Bryan Hancock The Day The Dollar Died
2 December 2010 | 96 replies
If Congress forces bloated GSEs to purchase debt that everyone knows is a bad investment The Fed has to take strong stances to ease the pain when the house of cards topples over.To me much of this anger toward The Fed and distrust of our monetary policy is misplaced.
Ryan B. Adjustment to 50% Rule
30 November 2010 | 80 replies
On the flip side larger units of properties generally have professional managers in place with excellent books and then occasionally you will have a few sellers that self-manage and keep poor books or a bad PM company.I have seen tally's of 25% to 60% in ranges on the 50% average used.I tell sellers when I list there property that they need to think about the buyer.Even though you manage the property and save 10% on property management doesn't mean the buyers will not use one.Example: Property at 100,000 NOI is 1,000,000 at a 10 CAP but put in management instead of self managing to reduce by 10k in costs now the property to achieve the same 10 cap is at 900k sales price.I find this happens often in the 10 unit to 30 unit apartment complex range where a seller can manage themselves.Anything above that in unit size usually a PM company is in place.So I tell sellers we have to price according to what the costs will be to the majority of buyers looking to purchase your property.As other investors have told me.Corporations say the seller does a great job with costs but our managing structure is different so we can't offer that price.Others say they can't manage the property as well as the seller can so have to offer based on more conservative numbers to give themselves a buffer.So as others I use the 50% equation as a quick reference and nothing more.When I get into cost analysis I ask myself if the seller has been cutting out trash pick ups,termite maintenance plans,and defering maintenance and improvements to boost cash flow on paper.
Francis A. Los Angeles - Owner of St. Louis Rams plans to build NFL stadium in Inglewood
28 January 2015 | 19 replies
Of course we have to keep in mind that there will only be 8 home games (plus pre season, playoffs and the occasional Super Bowl) each year.
Anna Watkins Atlanta neighborhood classification question
9 November 2017 | 106 replies
Occasionally I see what might be good deals, even on the MLS, but they'd require varying amounts of work.