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12 November 2018 | 13 replies
Originally posted by @Jr T.
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22 April 2017 | 27 replies
I would gladly gut her apt. tenants don't understand if I start renov with her in it. her life will be uncomfortable.but now she complains neighbor got this and that..she still living with old amenities. and she pays the most rent. other unit is studio and 1 bed at 500 & 590.but those unit were vacant at one point in time and I renovated during the vacancy and push rents up.should I leave the unit as it is. she can't afford 900. and it coming towards winter. all together good tenant.my husband wants her out but we don't really have cause bc although she is behind. she took up 2 jobs to get almost current
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7 October 2015 | 1 reply
Lastly, 1. depending on where the property is located, you might be able to raise rents and still be inside the rent cap. 2. if the property currently has debt, most Agency debt have restrictions that survive the LURA and may further impact you ability to take the property out of the affordable housing stock. 3.Are you under and HAP agreement?
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13 October 2015 | 9 replies
Plus you get other tax benefits of having such a big property.Again, it all depends on how well you buy, but I can afford to be patient and wait for the right deal.
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8 October 2015 | 7 replies
Maybe I am missing something but even though the mortgage may be getting paid off and your making a 10 percent cap rate I don't see how you would survive say a roof repair or even afford property management.
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14 October 2015 | 25 replies
So they get a shorter time than the appeals process would afford them, I get $300 more than I would get otherwise, and at the end of the 2 weeks they were out or the sheriff would have locked them out.So I recommend you not try to self help on the first one, although you are doing lots of valuable research.
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20 April 2016 | 5 replies
At the moment, state by state, Oklahoma is probably the toughest state to get affordable property insurance in.