
18 June 2013 | 9 replies
some have told me that I should pour a cup of bleach into two gallons of water and wash the whole place with this mixturesomeone else mentioned a bowl of vinegar placed in the middle of the floor.I have also tried Coffee which did help absorb a lot of the odor but there is still a lingering scent.I am frustrated because I am no expert cleaner. and I cant believe that washing the walls and doors did not solve this issue.

3 July 2013 | 13 replies
I'm currently dead in the water with another investor/partner.

18 June 2013 | 7 replies
That $1550 seems right for water, but $2k seems low for heat.

5 July 2013 | 25 replies
Make sure you get a deposit from the buyer before going under contract because if you go off of the buyer's word and the buyer backs out of the deal, then you WILL lose your earnest money from HUD, I lost my earnest twice because I couldn't find a buyer.3) No it is not necessary to have the electricity/water/heat/etc on, it's the buyer responsibility to do their own due diligence.
26 June 2013 | 2 replies
Does it have 2 furnaces & 2 water heaters?

25 June 2013 | 1 reply
If I do not find a mentor then I will just keep reading on BP, after I read the book of coarse.After reading I will definitely jump into the water with both feet.

26 June 2013 | 11 replies
My current improvement plan is: new roof - its really old and several shigles are gone new flooring throughout - currently concrete new paint in and out - 50% brick/siding ext repair siding on chimney - has rotted away due to water damage new water heater new AC/Furnace repair sheetrock water damage from plumbing leak replace kitchen appliances landscaping replace garage door - wood rotoptional items would include: replacing various fixtures - which ones?

5 June 2015 | 52 replies
True, you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him pull the trigger on a deal but most RE training has no stated learning objectives, no real student tracking and no way to measure long-term success.

27 June 2013 | 11 replies
You CAN transfer title with back taxes owed by using a Quit Claim Deed.I have purchased several houses from banks that had taxes due (also water bills and other fees) and the bank gave me a quit claim deed.

20 February 2014 | 16 replies
I would think utilities and water alone could easily amount to $1,000 in 6 mths, and taxes are generally high in NJ, correct?