
22 February 2021 | 0 replies
It finds that, as of late 2020, overall employment in the county was down 9.8 percent compared to the same point in 2019 (and that 9.8 percent was not distributed evenly across the population).

24 February 2021 | 4 replies
Some sub-markets we are considering are cities in between the major MSAs in NC- Between the Triad, Durham/Chapel Hill and Charlotte- places with growing population, job growth, steady rental increases, and other demographics that justify it being a good place to invest.

23 February 2021 | 6 replies
@Gavin Morinaga look at crime rates, unemployment rates, population growth, home price, avg rents and price to rent ratio, property tax rate

24 February 2021 | 11 replies
If I were in a long distance investing situation, I would stick with the larger populated areas.

25 February 2021 | 7 replies
It will bring up names you can click on the correct name and it will populate the comment box with their names and then they are informed.

24 February 2021 | 7 replies
My wife has a close friend who is also real estate agent agent in Charlotte, NC, which seems to be a hot spot for buying real estate given the boom in population.

23 February 2021 | 1 reply
They have a high population density.

16 March 2021 | 3 replies
I tend to mainly stay in one county of about 600,000 in population.

23 February 2021 | 5 replies
Both neighborhoods have high student populations as Western Michigan University and Kalamazoo College are right there.

10 August 2022 | 3 replies
You could go with just population moving which would be easier to find.