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6 March 2013 | 13 replies
Sorry it's a non-committal answer but there is no single set of rules written about how to price this out you set this up.
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5 May 2006 | 28 replies
You also don't mention if you paid a Realtor to find your tenants.My rule of thumb is that MONTHLY rent needs to be AT LEAST 1% of value of the house, but then I'm looking for a higher return.
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23 February 2006 | 3 replies
All depends on what you negotiate.As a general rule of thumb if you use a property manager you will pay: -1 month's rent for Managment fees (rent collection, maintenance, financial, etc) -1 month's rent for Listing fees (advertising, screening tenants, lease signing)So, the easy-sneezy solution will cost you 2 months (16%-24%) of your rental income each year for a normal propert under a one year lease.
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4 March 2006 | 12 replies
That will give you a lowball offer that can be justified with your estimates.
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8 June 2006 | 5 replies
Bad borrower than yes 2% is justified but if your a clean A borrower with little to do than 1% is pretty much good deal.Local banks will pull the same deal as Mortgage Brokers sometimes but again banks have just there programs while Mortgage Brokers have all the banks and even the local ones too.What type of arm are you getting?
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13 March 2006 | 10 replies
Mede,I do not have any idea on how the rules change in Canada versus the US.
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23 July 2019 | 3 replies
This is where foreign investors can ask about the laws and rules required for investing here in the states.
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28 March 2006 | 4 replies
Here is something that I found on the web, but I don't have any idea how accurate it is.Foreclosure rules vary from state to state and I don't think anyone wants to give you bad information.
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22 March 2006 | 1 reply
-There currently isn't much maintenence considering the property is 9 years old (probably about the time to start having some things break though).A little more info: I bought the property in 2000 so I am now beyond the 2 out of 5 year rule to avoid capital gains (shoulda sold it last year).
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17 February 2010 | 9 replies
The number one rule of investing is to not lose your capital.