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25 January 2020 | 2 replies
Right now I am unable to pay cash so I will have to get a conventional loan.
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25 January 2020 | 1 reply
I came across a property that is right now for sale 200k 13 unit property, and I came to about 4-500k all in with repairs and renovations I would like to purchase this property but I know my funds would come up just shy of being able to afford this if I went the conventional route.
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25 January 2020 | 0 replies
Going forward, stay away from conventional lenders and the SBA with hidden fees.
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31 January 2020 | 20 replies
Also any questions you'd be asking yourself would be a big help too.Additional context:- buy and hold w/conventional 5% loan;- refinance w/in ~24-months > move and repeat processThanks in advance!
25 January 2020 | 4 replies
Tell the loan officer what you plan to do, what type of down payment you have, and what kind of loan you want (conventional, FHA/203k (house hack) etc.).
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26 January 2020 | 7 replies
The IRS doesn't care if you bring your own cash to supplement or if you take conventional mortgage or hard money.
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28 January 2020 | 2 replies
If you're planning to sink $30,000 in rehab costs into the property up-front, I'm guessing it won't qualify for a conventional loan right away, and that you'll need to initially borrow from a hard-money / portfolio / private lender at a (much) higher interest rate, and then refinance once the property qualifies for a conventional loan.Lastly, nice job being thorough in your expense itemizations.
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26 January 2020 | 2 replies
Many of these are non-warrantable, meaning the percentage of investors is high and you can not get conventional financing (though you can find portfolio lenders).
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29 January 2020 | 11 replies
The conventional market is just below that with a great score, so if you can get that with a 550 and no doc then you have my attention.
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4 February 2020 | 11 replies
@Scott Sambrook Typically the conventional mortgage guidelines will allow you to use the new value after 6 months.