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16 March 2017 | 29 replies
I think you need to greatly enhance curb appeal too to get renters in the door. 2 cents.
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11 October 2016 | 14 replies
You learned a expensive lesson.
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6 September 2016 | 7 replies
Act as a RE agent that you are.. get a buyer if its a great deal that would not be hard.. sell it to them make your commish then get the list back rinse repeat about 20 times a year and make your self a few hundred grand with NO MOney out of your pocket other than normal business expenses anyone would have when you have your own business that provides you a 6 figure income.on the credit side I don't think folks realize how devastating it is to let your credit slide.. at least when you then want to get credit.. if there is anything for younger up and coming folks to hone in on is the disability you place yourself in when you cannot manage your personal credit and you let it get bad.
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28 August 2016 | 12 replies
Funneling all the extra cash that you would have, even assuming there are absolutely no other expenses that aren't accounted for, you won't be able to pay off $100,000 loan in 2 years.
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26 August 2016 | 20 replies
Weighing cost of hardwood vs less expensive carpeting.
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22 January 2019 | 10 replies
Conversely, there are a lot of other pockets that are slightly more expensive that you can get a quality renter in and make slightly less money.
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27 August 2016 | 17 replies
Not sure if you're being generous with your monthly expenses (vacancy, cap ex?)
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25 August 2016 | 4 replies
It could be either a coop or a condo - in a coop you own shares in the buildings corporation that entitle you to occupy a specific unit, in a condo you own the physical space. they'll have either maintenance fees or HOA fees as an additional expense, and these can go up whenever the board voted on them.
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17 September 2016 | 7 replies
I paid 67,500 "turn key" with 1750 in monthly rent 100% occupied which they were.In a made up world of zero expenses that's only a 31% return.
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27 August 2016 | 3 replies
I am not sure yet what are the main traits I should be looking for, but I believe that a good start would be a state/city/area that is: Landlord friendly (from the tenant- landlord perspective).Has a solid ROI Is considerably cheap (unlike San Francisco haha)Allows foreign investors Isn't too expensive tax wiseAny ideas and advice will be happily accepted :)Thanks in advance everybody!