
17 January 2021 | 2 replies
If you do, try to do joint access, so two properties share the entrance.

24 January 2021 | 8 replies
Here's my situation: My sister and I will be joint-venturing to purchase a commercial MF building this year.

17 January 2021 | 2 replies
The coolest thing was new unsealed mexican clay tile was laid on dining room floor with no expansion joint between walls; must be right before I bought it, and there was a water leak in kitchen wall adjacent to tiled room and the wood wall separating the two rooms swelled, and during the first few nights I kept hearing bangs like a .22 shell.
18 May 2021 | 9 replies
You can likely tell that I'm more familiar with Kent than Akron, but I think that joint area seems to be a solid area nonetheless.Thanks again Jack!
26 April 2021 | 0 replies
It has been our primary residence for 2 of the last 5 years, we file jointly, and one of the units has always been rented out.

27 April 2021 | 4 replies
So now I need to figure out how to get my money out in 14 days.Here is what I have tried:USAA/ALLY - Dont do business accounts and I already have an account, they wont give me a completely separate account.NOVO - need a US number (I got a dummy number through skype) and only does ACH transfer - not even Zelle, have to go through paypalTransferWise - painful to navigate and again wont do sperate from personnel checkingLocal Credit unions will not allow overseas, telephone confirmation and perm residence address All big banks - charge fees consistantly...so I never explored themHas anyone ever experienced this?

27 April 2021 | 1 reply
Joints should have been glued.
18 May 2021 | 23 replies
Someone told me on this site already that they don't need a PHD to understand the real estate market but I believe this article from a Senior Industry Fellow at Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University is helpful.

27 April 2021 | 6 replies
When you reach out to appropriate legal counsel, ask about adding a "joint and several liability clause" to your lease contract.

29 April 2021 | 2 replies
In the private equity world, joint venture equity is typically a 90/10 split of the required equity (90% investor/10% sponsor).