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3 January 2022 | 2 replies
The property has two doors, a 3/1 Single Family House, with a 2/1 Apartment that sits over a 2 car garage and extra storage unit.
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3 January 2022 | 6 replies
Sorry, I was saying when the lease ends raise it again, raise it “a lot” to the point where the new extra rent will make it worth it to you or will pay for the PM so you don’t have to deal with it.
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3 January 2022 | 7 replies
We don't charge them extra unless the owner is paying utilities at the property.
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3 January 2022 | 9 replies
You should speak to your partner and tell him that if he wants to do extra for the tenant then it comes from his money, not yours and whomever else you’re partnered with.
4 January 2022 | 5 replies
There might be a 10% chance an escrow company could hold the money for 1 or 2 big repairs until a licensed and bonded company submitted bills for the repairs to be reimbursed and the extra returned to the seller.
2 January 2022 | 0 replies
The extra cash infusion would def help lower my own capital expenses for purchase and renovating.
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4 January 2022 | 6 replies
#2 What I see is about 30% fee, that's the tough part...if you hit $3000/month and loose 30% of that, you're back down to LTR rate...plus you probably have extra expenses, like furnishings, utilities, consumables, lawn care, hot tub.
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8 January 2022 | 14 replies
But I am leaning towards properties that break even and have high appreciation so that i don't have extra income when I am in a high tax bracket here in California.I am looking for suggestions on what is the best strategy.1. get a property locally in A class neighborhood costing around $600,000 to 800,000 and hold long term for appreciation (no cashflow)2. work with a turnkey provider and let them handle the portfolio3. work with a real estate agent, property manager and invest out of state and look for cash-flow and appreciation (more work)
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13 January 2022 | 3 replies
with email marketing for example, a good open rate is 20%. with text, the average open rate is 90% or higher. everyone reads every text they get. that extra 10% is due to some phone carriers having a “spam text” folder. i personally have never seen this, but i do see many of my texts not being delivered due to the phone carriers’ spam folders. anywho, people rarely answer the phone, and almost always listen to voicemails. so i feel texts & voicemail drops would probably have about the same efficacy. texts might beat VM drops because they could be perceived to be more authentic (depending on how they’re written), meaning more responses. you’d also have to consider your demographic. will you know that the #s on the list are cell phones vs landlines?