Tony Hoffer
To 401k... Or Not??
27 August 2016 | 16 replies
The flexibility of those assets can increase greatly if you leave your job.
Tom Albares
Need some advice on a REO
26 August 2016 | 1 reply
Should I increase the bid to their asking price?
Jerad Gardner
What Was Your First Step into the Industry?!
28 August 2016 | 6 replies
No special development taxes...Sold One year now, 16% increase in equity.
Victor Vazquez
house hacking
12 January 2017 | 21 replies
Many towns have minimum housing standards.
Brad Weaver
Area Demographics/Research Question
27 August 2016 | 3 replies
I would assume that with an increase in renter occupied units in an area, the competition would be higher and therefore it would make sense to go outside of the area of competition (given other demographic information indicates the area is still appropriate for a buy and hold strategy).
Michael Malloy
Need info on Insurance Clue Report for Rehab
31 August 2016 | 5 replies
We've seen a huge increase in inspections, and they are very closely looking at roofs.
Christine Swaidan
Coretec Plus floor
3 November 2022 | 9 replies
My rule of thumb for rehab costs is try to gain at least $2 value increase for every $1 spent on labor and materials.
Kay Ferdous
Realistic property management for 8 unit building
30 August 2016 | 9 replies
Some towns have brutal rent control ordinances that can prevent you from increasing your annual rents.
Sandy Uhlmann
Seller Financed Deals
27 August 2016 | 1 reply
Is it true that you can increase the price of a home that is offered with seller financing so perhaps this amount offsets the discounted payoff offered by the note buyer or at least this increase may pay all or some of the Realtor's commission?
Michael Prim
New to REI - Multi-Family Question
29 August 2016 | 7 replies
It appears the units are below market, however with some cosmetic repairs and perhaps some capex's I feel I could increase the rent by at minimum (based on local comps) 68%.I would offer 85% of list and estimated $20,000 in repairs/upgrades (this is probably a generous estimate - the property appears to be in good shape, basically needs a face lift).With all these figures, including the 50% rule, financing with 20% down @ 3.5%, I come out to a profit of $262 per unit and a cash-on-cash return of 9.53%.So, does this seems reasonable?