
29 February 2016 | 0 replies
I have done the math many different ways in order to determine what I should offer, I would greatly appreciate the BP communities opinion's.Here are the details below:8 unit, all attached, one big "box", 3500 sf totalAll are 2 bed, 1 bath units that are 425 sf each (3400 sf total) 100 sf utility room)Dishwasher, Range, Refer in each unit.Units bring in $570 to $630 a month depending on tenant locked in rate, i.e. new tenants pay more. ($4790 / month currently) 100% occ., historically 95% + occ. rateQuality: out of date,interior 15-20 years old, entire apt. unit built in 1990Maintenance: well maintained but out of date2 story, 1 acre, room to expand, slab on gradeNear high school and walking distance to hospitalGross income last year was $56,000, Actual Op.

1 March 2016 | 5 replies
I have done the math many different ways in order to determine what I should offer, I would greatly appreciate the BP communities opinion's.Here are the details below:8 unit, all attached, one big "box", 3500 sf totalAll are 2 bed, 1 bath units that are 425 sf each (3400 sf total) 100 sf utility room)Dishwasher, Range, Refer in each unit.Units bring in $570 to $630 a month depending on tenant locked in rate, i.e. new tenants pay more. ($4790 / month currently) 100% occ., historically 95% + occ. rateQuality: out of date,interior 15-20 years old, entire apt. unit built in 1990Maintenance: well maintained but out of date2 story, 1 acre, room to expand, slab on gradeNear high school and walking distance to hospitalGross income last year was $56,000, Actual Op.

31 May 2016 | 11 replies
hmmm..... well I figured time is money and I received over $20K in two weeks to utilize anyway I see fit AND its not a loan its building my business credit.

1 March 2016 | 3 replies
Hi Ethan Massa -Although I don't have any local recommendations I would recommend utilizing Thumbtack.com to find some great companies.

1 March 2016 | 3 replies
My long term goal for real estate is to get into business with the most luxurious real estate such as multi million dollar homes, 5 star hotels, casinos, resorts etc.

1 March 2016 | 3 replies
This way, you can review the lease up fee, management fee, how they handle utilities and other payments as well as vendors.

5 October 2016 | 6 replies
I'm interested in investing in SFR's and small 2-4 unit multi-family properties in the Inland Empire, looking to utilize the BRRRR strategy (and possibly the occasional flip).

2 March 2016 | 21 replies
Assumption 1: If the tenants pay their own utilities the expense ratio should be around 30% (in a well run park)Assumption 2: if the owner pays the utilities the expense ratio should be around 40% (in a well run park)Assumption 3: Do math for a 10 Cap-it works for any Cap rate you choose including positive or negative*************************************************************************************************************************Net operating income=gross income - expenses Using the expense ration of 30% => Net Operating Income*(1-expense ratio)=> NOI*(1-.3)Therefore:NOI/yr=(#lot)*(rent per lot per month)*(12 month per year)*(1-expense ratio)Cap Rate=NOI/Purchase pricedo some 8th grade algebra followed by some 6th grade math (dividing with a decimal)Purchase price=NOI/Cap rateTherefore:Purchase price{tenants pay utility}={#lots*Monthly Rent*12*(1-.3)}/0.1 =>84* lots * rentPurchase Price {owner pays utilities}={#lots*monthy rent*12*(1-.4)}/0.1 =>72*lots*rentThere are the 72/84 numbers derivedIts not rocket surgery.

2 March 2016 | 9 replies
- it's always good to see another Hoosier utilizing this great site!

2 March 2016 | 17 replies
I know broke people driving luxury cars.