17 March 2018 | 3 replies
Assuming you use financial wisdom and insure your income more than covers your leverage not using it is financially stunted.
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16 March 2018 | 2 replies
.$450K purchase price, 25% down...30 year fixed rate mortgage at 5% on $337,500 is $1,812 per month...So if you have zero vacancy you'll break-even on the mortgage...And then burn money on maintenance, cap-ex (likely very limited), any vacancy, property taxes, insurance, etc.Consequently, you really, really, REALLY need that home price to go up.
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17 March 2018 | 2 replies
Its why you have reserves, to fix the unexpected.Now if the damage isn't sub $500 and I misread it, and its going to be a lot more, file with insurance and let them sort it out.
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20 March 2018 | 12 replies
You should determine the monthly cost for property taxes, insurance, repairs/maint, capex & maybe vacancy.
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17 March 2018 | 4 replies
If you have a fixed rate amortizing loan, your mortgage payment stays the same from year to year, but property taxes and property insurance premiums tend to increase.
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2 April 2018 | 6 replies
Hello everyone, I currently have 6 properties all in Maine and all insured through Allstate. 5 are landlord policies (3 unit, 4 unit, 3 unit, sfh and 3 unit) and one is home owner (4 unit).
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17 March 2018 | 6 replies
The insurance company put tenants up in a hotel.
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19 March 2018 | 1 reply
@Ryan Keenan Lenders will generally add mortgage, interest, insurance, property taxes and depreciation back into your gross income when comparing it to your federal taxes and total PITI.
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22 March 2018 | 18 replies
@Omar Khan ok I think I understand... so FHA always pay mortgage insurance premium unless you refinance.
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2 December 2018 | 3 replies
However it is an investment that may require you to be more hands on to insure the decisions made affect your return in a positive way .