
6 December 2017 | 21 replies
The returns are of course lower than selling $1m+ houses and condos, but the volume is high.

29 November 2017 | 12 replies
California has a wacky law where assessed value for property taxes can only increase at a very limited rate (~1%) so most people are locked into property tax rates much lower than their current home values, so this favors purchasing rather than waiting.$4300/month is at the high-end of affordability for me, so seems like the only way I'll be able to purchase a home of the quality/location I want is to liquidate (at least some portion of) my real estate portfolio.
28 November 2017 | 3 replies
The principal for the property currently sits at about $86,820, with an Escrow balance of about $850.This is obviously a very bad deal as it is; my question is what would be the best option to drop the mortgage every month in order to get a positive cash flow, either by refinancing the mortgage, or getting some other loan at a much lower monthly cost?

16 September 2019 | 9 replies
Also, appraisal and market values can be different and it might be lower than you're expecting.

28 November 2017 | 2 replies
Adding another meter base and city water meter could increase your cost to build a lot, but lower the monthly expenses.

28 November 2017 | 2 replies
While we do have cash saved up, we'd prefer to work on our credit for another year before looking at getting a mortgage or commercial loan to possibly do a fix and flip.If you were us, would you a) use our cash to purchase, fix and flip something older and cheaper outright which seems like a huge undertaking for our first deal, b) use our cash as the downpayment/skin-in for a hard money loan (balloon) while we work on conventional qualifications to refi at a lower rate in 12 months, c) My in-laws are in the process of purchasing a seller-financed home and are interested in "renting-to-own" their place to us.

6 December 2017 | 37 replies
If there were no vacancies or capex this year her cap makes sense for 1 year... you use your numbers as leverage to lower the price.

17 December 2017 | 5 replies
BUT, the positive would be:+ Catagory A neighborhood with stable renters+ Betting on property value will increase over 10+ yr given the neighborhood+ Turnkey rental, leases in place till 2018Would these positives balance out the lower CAP rate?

14 December 2017 | 4 replies
I haven't ever put in offers lower than 90% of asking and often will offer more than asking if that's my best price for the deal.

29 November 2017 | 4 replies
@Mike Bonadies...Cash flow properties in a house hack are tough due to the lower cap rate in the DC Metro.