21 February 2013 | 4 replies
Here are a few questions:- What age range of houses are best for flipping?

2 April 2013 | 21 replies
Though within 6-8 month it looks slightly difficult to develop a property, but nothing is impossible in today's age with so much of technological development.

11 February 2011 | 6 replies
Think about age of students there and what kids that age can / might do.That's why some people don't want to be too close to a high school.

21 September 2017 | 29 replies
Paul broght up the age-old SFR vs MFR (2-4 unit properties in this context) earlier in this thread.

29 August 2011 | 13 replies
Buildings of this age can have costly insurance as insurance companies know unless everything has been replaced the failure rate for things increases along with frequency of increase of claims.What is the turnover rate for the apartment and what vacancy is the seller reporting??

24 October 2011 | 11 replies
It is just like a police officer, teacher are firefighter, you can't do it for the money.financially speaking, my benefits at age 40, will roughly equal to $48,000 a year for the rest of my life.

20 October 2014 | 3 replies
You're also right in that it's a unique property, the zoning, age and size make it unusual.

23 May 2012 | 5 replies
One is for replacement of aging items (roof, furnace, stove, etc all have a certain limited projected life expectancy); for these, divide the cost to replace by the remaining useful life in months to get a monthly reserve amount to set aside.

20 June 2010 | 10 replies
This helps us weed out the groups of unrelated adults that pop up now and again.We also would verify all information on all parties, you mentioned two separate addresses, check them both, if they turn out to be parents, this is also a sign of a problem, especially when age is considered.

27 June 2010 | 38 replies
Let's consider the age old economic rule, "Supply and Demand".