
16 December 2015 | 4 replies
I used this for when I looked here in Chicago and Found an attorney that makes my life 10x easier with communication with the title company, receiving documents and forwarding documents plus all the emails they handle.

22 December 2015 | 13 replies
Lots of folks can read a note and tell you if it is standard practice, Realtors, title agents, your accountant probably could, other investors in your area.

21 December 2015 | 10 replies
I am looking to build a network of reliable, real estate friendly Realtors, accountants, title companies, contractors, etc. in Prince George's County.

26 December 2015 | 14 replies
Talk to a Local closing/title co.

19 January 2016 | 5 replies
Hello Everyone - I am currently a student working full time at First American Title.

18 December 2015 | 13 replies
My local Realtor board I belong to has lease option addendum and riders that go along with our standard ASIS contract, and I'm going to have a client who is an attorney and owns a title company help me with these, but I will ask him about it.

16 December 2015 | 6 replies
@Blake Elder On a sidenote, using a deed of that nature will not convey your existing title insurance to the LLC You should use a grant or warranty deed They are the same thing just a different name I could be wrong on this but you may want to look into it Furthermore I don't think there's any more cost associated with the grant deed I guess you could always talk to the person who gave you title insurance

15 December 2015 | 2 replies
According to the American Land Title Association, the following types of loans do not have to comply with TRID:Home-equity lines of credit Reverse mortgages Mortgages secured by a mobile home or dwelling not attached to land No-interest second mortgage made for down payment assistance, energy efficiency or foreclosure avoidance Loans made by a creditor who makes five or fewer mortgages in a year And, in addition, 100% cash transactions (no lender involved) are also exempt.

18 December 2015 | 7 replies
That means becoming an expert on an area, having a well seasoned team in place to act quickly ( realtor, lender, title and contractors) and having some balls to execute on the right transaction.

23 December 2015 | 7 replies
One that is on the title, and another that acts as the contractor so "owner" can hire "contractor" to do the work.Tax reasons... capital gains reasons... etc.