
2 July 2024 | 17 replies
Hi Ant,As MP mentioned.Hire good property management.You have a few solid options in town.If you manage yourself, you will save on fee's but IMO it's like tripping over dollars to pick up pennies.Investors should focus on the next deal and scaling their portfolio while not being bogged down with minutia.And there is a tonne of "minutia" when it comes to property management.Sure, you can manage 2-3 or 4 properties.Managing 10+ is a different story and a full time job almost.Wishing you much success
1 July 2024 | 1 reply
Hello,I'm planning on investing in a 4 unit property with my sister-in-law using her as the primary buyer qualifying for a first time homebuyers program and me providing the capital and being a co-borrower on the loan.

29 June 2024 | 9 replies
A fully paid off property which now should be worth at least $300K with appreciation, I can access 75% of that with a cash out refi so roughly $225K - refi costs.To me, its a no brainer to do bi-weekly IF you plan to keep the house for that long AND you do not plan to refinance (rate or cash out).

2 July 2024 | 13 replies
As I build my revenue I plan on expanding to buy and hold deals, so I need something flexible.

1 July 2024 | 10 replies
Try to save the houses that are most similar to yours and watch them daily to see if they lower the rent, offer incentives, or get rented. 1.

1 July 2024 | 0 replies
Planning on renovating and renting at market rates.

3 July 2024 | 21 replies
We plan on renting the property. thank you.

1 July 2024 | 0 replies
Coordinating a same-day sale required precise timing, efficient communication, and meticulous planning.

1 July 2024 | 8 replies
If they happen to be communicating through text (as is common), then make sure your son saves all of the text messages.

2 July 2024 | 19 replies
people get great joy talking doom and gloom and Armageddon.I’ve been in the RE biz since 1978 and been thru several economic and market cycles.Stagflation in the 70s, 17% home loan rates in the early 1980s, the failure of 1/3 of American Savings and Loans in the early 1990s, the dot com boom the dot com bust, the subprime crisis in 2008, Covid………I’m probably forgetting a few.