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Results (10,000+)
Lisa Hines Amount needed to start lending
22 August 2015 | 4 replies
Raising capital to become a lender through rental property ownership is a years and years long process, and like lending, being a landlord is a huge people person undertaking.  
Jonathan Waters Getting started and good resources
23 August 2015 | 8 replies
I wish all my clients had the forethought to get started using this strategy when they started in the investment purchases.I am setting up my children to go into their home ownership the exact same way.
Bryan O. LLC Lenders in Quad City (Davenport, IA)
29 August 2015 | 3 replies
Realize that most lenders will value the property at your purchase price plus rehab costs and not the fair market value within the first year of your ownership.  
Sawyer Nyquist Starting out in Dallas with $500 ....any advice?
22 December 2015 | 12 replies
hi sawyer. you are in a tough spot with the little money down. deals are out there, but with that little down, the deals will be few. let me give you a couple of ideas. first, lets state that the saying " it takes money to make money" is very true. you need money. if you don't have much cash yourself, then you need to use OPM, other peoples money. this usually requires a bank and a loan. take that $500 and put it into an account. after a month, go to that bank and ask for a $500 loan, and use the account as collateral. take the borrowed $500 and start an account with another bank. repeat the process as often as you can. at some point, use the last $500 to pay off the first $500 loan, and repeat that process. the reason being is because you are establishing good credit with several banks. pretty soon, you will be able to borrow money from these banks in larger amounts and with no collateral, thus resulting in using other peoples money. 2nd idea: a few years ago, the feds put a limit on the number of foreclosed houses banks could put back out onto the market. they did this because the flood of foreclosed houses was killing the housing market. so the bank was left with a lot of houses they literally could not put back on the market. so, they had to decide if the cost of being forced to hold onto some of the houses for an indefinite period of time was worth it or not. the ones that were not worth it, they just "dropped" off their books. they do this by just filing a " release of lien" or a " release of mortgage" with the county register of deeds. this does 2 things. one, the bank no longer has any claim to the house, and therefore, no liability either. and it also puts the ownership of that house back into the hands of the previous owner. most of these owners do not know this happened because the letter the bank sends out to them goes to the last known address the bank has for them, which is often the house that was foreclosed on, and the owner no longer lives there. you have to find the owner and by the house from them. most often, they do not want it anymore. you may be able to get these places for your $500. beware, quite often these houses have years of back taxes owed on them so do your research. ask the tax authority if you can make a payment agreement with them on the house BEFORE you buy it from the owner. use the back taxes issue as a ploy to get the owner to sell the house to you cheap. this takes time to find a house like this. i have been doing real estate investing for many years now and i have only bought 2 houses this way, but its worth the shot. i bought one like this for $2000 on a tuesday and sold it on thursday for $10,000. good luck to you.
Yuri Chernousko Closing documents - sharing with 3rd parties
23 August 2015 | 1 reply
- What other types of proof do you use with 3rd parties for ownership verification purposes?
Alisha Mingus How to structure a RTO rehab deal
23 August 2015 | 5 replies
@Alisha MingusCall me Brian :)Is in example let's say there is $100,000 home ARV or after repair valueIs the first mortgage that's 95,000 balance, $5000 equityYou're basically taking over the payments of the first mortgage, you getting the deed and title subject to the existing financing; Think of it like you can have ownership and have somebody else be on the financingIf you're on the deed, you have legal titleso Sub2 is the strongest way for you to buy a property and strongest title ownership without a bank, better than a wraparound mortgage, better than a lease optionJust remember subject to you shouldn't hold title very long because there is a due on sale clause issue, where the bank could call loan due, so that's why subject to is good for fix and flipsAnd yes nine times out of 10 on BiggerPockets JV means a joint venture :)If you have any questions give me a call :)
Tim Wilderbeeste Wells Fargo won't allow us to place property in LLC
22 January 2016 | 28 replies
Those rules include ownership, and they only lend on properties owned by an individual.
Account Closed Am I in the clear?
7 September 2015 | 11 replies
He stated I cannot broker a deal unless I have ownership rights via the contract.
Tyler Walker Buying a Condo for a Rental
25 August 2015 | 0 replies
My plan is to add it to our rental fleet (wow, that sounds big - but the fleet is really small so far).3bd, 1.5 bath with basement and back yard (property is included and is not part of any condo ownership).
Lynette Croschere removal of tenant in Wisconsin
25 August 2015 | 6 replies
@Lynette Croschere from what you said this is not a regular tenant, they have an ownership interest in the property?