
25 February 2019 | 4 replies
Would this raise our Debt to income ratio and limit us to only commercial property?

25 February 2019 | 6 replies
Would you say pay off the student debt first or pay it down more?

4 March 2019 | 18 replies
Are you using non-recourse debt to finance your investment properties.

25 February 2019 | 12 replies
We have no debt (been able to pay for school using grants/working).
23 February 2019 | 0 replies
(to name a few):- RealBlocks (https://www.realblocks.com/), only for accredited investors, allows for secondary liquidity from P2P token exchanges for fractions of individual CRE properties- BuildingBits (https://buildingbits.com/), for both non-accredited and accredited investors, $100 minimum investing in individual CRE properties- Jointer (https://www.jointer.io/), for both accredited and non-accredited investors, allows you to tokenize your property by creating a land-trust and allowing Jointer to purchase equity in your property in exchange for cash (financed by token holders/investors who are debt financing at an interest rate equal to a CRE index), while you continue to manage your property and split cash-flow and appreciation profits with Jointer.

25 February 2019 | 8 replies
Then once The tenants family gets his crap out I get them to sign off tenancy and all possessions that day .I then clean up and burn or throw out anything left .

28 February 2019 | 3 replies
The primary reason we are not yet is due to a decently large amount of student debt we acquired in undergraduate (30K remaining).

1 March 2019 | 1 reply
Our income is sub $60k/year (with the GI Bill income, etc) and we're about a year and a half from being debt free on the cars/cards/etc.
6 March 2019 | 4 replies
But you want the tax basis to raise and you also do not want to saddle a new company with too much debt so you cannot get a line of credit right out of the gate.

18 February 2020 | 7 replies
I only say this because I had a friend use the BRRRR strategy but then couldn't get approved for a 2nd property due to his debt to income ratio.