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Results (9,951+)
Luke H. Evict me or give me my deposit back
20 April 2018 | 42 replies
To me this is a warning to keep all tenant relationships as professional as possible.
Justin Phillip Tax question about buying seller financing
4 April 2018 | 6 replies
If you don't get those, that is a clear warning
Brandon Snyder What happens if a desist and refrain is ignored?
4 April 2018 | 8 replies
A warning is issued if warranted.
Courtney Fricke Could you make a wholesale deal w/this owner financing situation?
4 April 2018 | 12 replies
You are the sort of "buyer" that Sellers should be warned about! 
Steven Rich Inman Warns Every U.S.
5 April 2018 | 1 reply
Inman recently published a Warning about how the Upcoming GDPR Law may Force Every U.S.
Lucas Nassef Lynchburg VA rental oppertunities.
7 April 2018 | 0 replies
If anyone has had success with or even has horror stories about why I should or shouldn't purchase a town home as a first time rental property investor please share some suggestions or warnings. thank you all.
Matthew R Crawford First House Dilemma
12 April 2018 | 18 replies
The fact that this house fell out of contract before on inspection is a warning sign. 
Greg Tawes Plumbing Damage by Tennant
17 February 2018 | 4 replies
I couldn't prove it who did it, so I dropped it but gave both sides a stern warning that they would both be hit with the fee if it happens again. 
Paul DeSilva Banks are only offering commercial loans on my 2 family refinance
24 February 2018 | 16 replies
@Paul DeSilva:@John Leavelle and @Anthony Gayden (above) are both correct.Unless you have more than 10 residential mortgages, or the properties are above the jumbo mortgage limits or you're trying to finance the the properties with the LLC intact, then they should qualify for conventional residential FNMA loans.For the LLC situation: my strategy is to close the loan under my personal name (no LLC), then after a few months of "seasoning" to establish on-time payment, notify the lender that I plan to drop the property into an LLC strictly for asset protection purposes.Many seasoned pros will tell you that you don't even have to notify the lender that you plan to do so, but will warn that doing so runs the ever-so-slight risk that they may actually call the entire loan due immediately.
Nicholas Richard Ray Investing Across The River
17 April 2018 | 10 replies
At the end of the day the high real estate taxes, which is definitely the biggest warning I think I've heard, is just a number to factor in - so if the numbers still work it's a good deal either way.Good tip on the flipping being a better investment than renting in Illinois - something to keep in mind if I do start looking seriously over there.Always appreciate the input.