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11 October 2013 | 17 replies
Locksmith came out, drilled through the cylinder and charged me $80.
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15 December 2011 | 5 replies
This reminds me of squatters in Dallas-http://www.wfaa.com/news/crime/From-Eviction-to-Jail-135537188.htmlI'm not an attorney but maybe they can also be charged with burglary, or at least threaten to do so if they don't get the heck out.
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16 December 2011 | 10 replies
With only 1 rental you won't get management for 10%, it'll likely be 12 - 14% depending on turnover (they'll charge you 1/2 to 1 months rent to fill a vacancy).Florida is a very depressed housing market.
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17 December 2011 | 4 replies
Look for what other storage units in the same area, of similar size charge and use that to price this one.
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18 December 2011 | 7 replies
I then turn it over to a draftsman I'm very comfortable with and pay a whole lot less than a namebrand architect would charge.
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20 December 2011 | 10 replies
Understand that a big company will charge them 10% plus 1/2 a month's rent to fill a vacancy.
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20 December 2011 | 12 replies
Allows me to even manage other investor properties and charge management fees.I know Quickbooks has an online version so if you have internet on your phone that would be possible.ThanksDan
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27 December 2011 | 11 replies
I think I like Steve's idea better...but if I did buy and rent the gas dryer out, how much would you charge to rent something like that?
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6 November 2018 | 5 replies
How much do people normally charge for assignment fees or finders fees?
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26 April 2013 | 2 replies
They're smaller, tend to be on long, skinny lots (for a while most cities charged property tax on how many feet of street access you had, so you had a lot of long, skinny lots), and are in older areas of town.You can also find out the years properties were built by checking out the county records, or other means of snooping on one's neighbors- like http://www.city-data.com/, which is a good, free resource to get demographics of an area, and you can also go up and down streets (in my city at least) and find out what the tax records say- bedrooms, bathrooms, tax appraised value, all that good stuff.There's lots of places and tools to get that information, but that's one of the sites I use a lot.