Matthew Drouin
Monthly Real Estate Investors Meetups (Rochester, Buffalo, Syracuse)
22 October 2024 | 3 replies
This is a great group!
Shelton Thelismon
New to the Website
22 October 2024 | 4 replies
This approach allows you to ease into being a landlord while building a trusted team.
Steve Dora
1st Purchase utilizing HELOC...what are my options?
10 October 2024 | 11 replies
Is this your first investment purchase altogether OR your first purchase using a HELOC?
Account Closed
Mark Evans DM Who is this Guy ?
8 October 2024 | 14 replies
He's still out there promoting...just not this as he's on to other things....hopefully not another scam.
Denise Evans
Alabama Tax Lien Investing: Gap Years
14 October 2024 | 7 replies
If you are Sally, this is useful to you.
Derrick Sanford
Hello from the Midwest(Tulsa/Broken Arrow) and getting deeper into real estate.
23 October 2024 | 7 replies
If anyone has any information or advise we would greatly appreciate your insight, we hope to bring value to you or someone you may know in exchange.Happy to tap into the BiggerPockets community and excited to make new connections on this journey!
Javier Pompa
Neighbors accumulating junk
21 October 2024 | 2 replies
Any thoughts on how to go about this?
Jason Frink
Legal advice around Crossett property.
21 October 2024 | 2 replies
Each state can be a little different so the details matter. https://www.omglawfirm.com/arkansas-probate-intestate-succes...Here is the pertinent excerpt:If you don’t have a Will, the default order of descent goes like this: (1) full blood and adopted children of the decedent, subject to any dower, curtesy, and homestead interest of a spouse; (2) if no full blood or adopted children, then everything to a spouse of greater than three years or half of everything plus dower, curtesy, and homestead to a spouse of less than three years and the other half of everything to other heirs (per this table); (3) to the decedent’s parents or surviving siblings; (4) to the decedent’s grandparents or surviving aunts, uncles, cousins, etc.; (5) to the decedent’s great-grandparents or surviving great aunts, great uncles, etc.; (6) if none of those intermediate descendents are alive the remaining half can go to the spouse of less than three years or to a predeceased spouse’s heirs; (7) finally, if none of these apply, all the property escheats to the county where the decedent died.
Jeorgea Beck
adding ADU's onto a 4-plex
21 October 2024 | 3 replies
I realize residential financing doesn't currently allow for this and pulling money out down the road could be more complex or strictly in the commercial lending realm.Any and all feedback is appreciated!