
4 February 2020 | 1 reply
When we rolled our construction loan into a mortgage, we took cash out on that and bought the vacant lot across the street, and will begin construction on an identical duplex as soon as we get the permits and construction loan.Since my partner is semi-retired, he doesn't have the energy to put into locating/fixing/flipping etc.

4 February 2020 | 9 replies
I haven't looked it up lately.You can roll your CG into another purchase if you do a 1031 exchange.

5 February 2020 | 7 replies
Use a fresh new previously plastic-wrapped roll of the premium 3M blue tape for this, or use new green Frog Tape sealed in its package.

21 February 2020 | 5 replies
I would check with your HSA Provider and see if you can do a rollover from a TSP to your HSA...They would be the ones who would know.If you can't roll it in directly you could probably roll $10,000 from the TSP (assuming you've separated from service) to an IRA and then roll it into a HSA.

7 February 2020 | 11 replies
Some of them end up being the nice family that had one income earner who lost their job and held on for as long as they could etc but some of them are the guy who lost the job because of drug testing and then lost 5 more jobs the same way and then did the spiral into bankruptcy.

16 February 2020 | 27 replies
That's so dangerous, if I pulled up next to him, I'd have have a good mind to put my phone down, roll down my window, and throw my beer bottle at him!

6 February 2020 | 16 replies
It's probably worth rolling the dice on non-renewal, @Martha Daisley.

17 February 2020 | 4 replies
Hi guys, I wanted to give back to the BiggerPockets community as everyone here has always been so helpful. I'm currently working on a new property management platform that combines software with a trained team and AI....

8 February 2020 | 26 replies
Keep in mind this percentage is a quick, back of the napkin calculation to do a quick “test” to see where approximately the deal sits.

17 June 2021 | 22 replies
Here are the Caveats though, you can only refinance to get the amount of your acquisition cost back out + roll in refinance closing costs up to 75% LTV on a non-owner occupied property and or up to 80% on an owner occupied property.If you want cash out beyond the acquisition costs, based on a higher appraised value, you must be on title for 6 months and you can do 75% LTV on a rental, and 80% on an owner occupied for conventional loans.You can do cash out on some portfolio loans immediately after purchase to as long as 6 months after purchase.