Josh Sicotte
Need advice on potential wholesale deal
15 September 2016 | 2 replies
High estimate, maybe $4-5k rehab costs to add more value to property thus allowing for slightly higher rent.
William Collins
BRRRR next brick in the wall
28 January 2017 | 21 replies
Those buys look to have reasonable safety margins, just in case the appraisals fall a bit short, or the allowable LTV falls to 70% instead of 75%.
Account Closed
MLS access
28 September 2016 | 6 replies
Can I "partner" with a Realtor (Is this allowed?)
Michael R.
Wholesaler from Arizona
16 September 2016 | 8 replies
I live in the far east valley which allows me to market in both Phoenix and Tucson.
Leland S.
How much to put into rehab?
24 September 2016 | 23 replies
I guess this allows lots of mom n pop shops to operate without all the extra expenses when doing small jobs.I am interested though if adding a shower needs permits in order to register the house with the county as an official 2 bath house.
Deanna Graham
Getting a Loan for a Rental at 50,000 and Below
26 September 2016 | 5 replies
The reason is because closing costs are not(by law) allowed to exceed a certain percentage, and under $35k it automatically does, because most banks closing costs are set.
Greg Rutkowski
Tax question in California...maybe other state too.
15 September 2016 | 5 replies
The answer is, a mortgage payment in 2016 would allow you to take that payment's interest piece in 2016.
Amanda Moore
Feel like giving up!
23 September 2016 | 40 replies
I know this an epic debate for investors but my personal opinion leans towards having a license especially if you in the wholesale business.... puts a layer of disclosure on top of course but allows you to give the property owners some options. 1) "I have investors who are looking for properties like yours that can pay cash and close quickly to solve your problem Mr Seller" or 2) "Just need to sell but don't have an urgent time constraint you say?
David Carr
Acquired tenant, raising rent and trying to keep tenant..
19 September 2016 | 9 replies
Ideally, I would allow him to rent the first month at his current rate and then the following month I would increase him to market.
Jane Guerreso
Landlord does not report our ontime rent. Impact on our credit?
15 September 2016 | 4 replies
@Jane Guerreso the credit bureaus will typically not allow individual landlords to report payment data to them without going through an extensive membership process.