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Results (10,000+)
Aloma Murray Advice on how to charge for damaged flooring/trim etc on move out
4 September 2017 | 4 replies
If you have before and after photos, and some general standard of maintaining the property, again you should be ok.
Joe Stimm Buying my first rental property
3 September 2017 | 0 replies
Save for 7-8 months and get my 20% down of 10k on it and go to a bank which isn't my favorite option or maybe since I was reading on here that life insurance company's have a very low interest rate and like to invest in multi family buildings that would be another good option.
Cenddie Alaban Our family friend has $150,000 in cash but cannot buy a house.
6 September 2017 | 57 replies
Since then I've worked my way up to almost 800 fico, following all the standard advice.
Steve Logan Tankless Water Heaters
23 September 2017 | 24 replies
They will run 20+ years while a standard tank unit is 10-15.
Ryan K. Offer 1/3 of asking price ?
4 September 2017 | 12 replies
If you talk to her and say, "You know, I think it's probably worth $175K after it's all fixed up, I think it will take me $60K with with all the known and unknown work, plus 6 months of my own time (@$4k/mo), interest on the loan, insurance, permits, etc etc, so subtracting that from the final value, I can offer about $50-60K." 
Terry Woolard Private/ Hard money lending
29 September 2017 | 2 replies
Here is a link to a 'standard' D-T from the NC Bar.
Herman Chen Trigger happy beginner
20 September 2017 | 32 replies
I won't go into it here, but if you want to exchange into multiple properties, there are some important rules about identification of replacement props you should get comfy with, namely the standard 3 Property rule, the 200% rule, and the 95% exception.
M Marie M. 469 square feet of rental house Baltimore, MD
9 October 2017 | 16 replies
Stuff just got real.First thing I did was insured it.Then I hunted and found someone to do the title work.
Justin Seng School taxes when analyzing properties
10 November 2017 | 10 replies
If it IS a separate bill in your area then yes, definitely include it as an expense, and the 'other expense' category would be a good place.You want to include ANY expense you might incur - I was watching a webinar last week from the archives and it was interesting how a couple things that I dont deal with; flood insurance, garage & water/sewer (tenants pay in my area) completely changed one of Brandon's deals he was looking at from pretty good to just break even. 
Justice Adderley Newbie Questions from florida
5 September 2017 | 3 replies
You have to take full advantage of the seven years you have until you'll have to start paying four-figure sums monthly for your own health insurance.