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3 May 2018 | 12 replies
Taxes & Insurance are typically around $600 a year for each here with these properties.
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17 May 2018 | 6 replies
Most attorneys will settle a transaction as part of their fee, but even if they charge a few hundred extra, the title company charges just as much typically for settling, so you're just moving that fee to another part of your settlement statement.
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9 May 2018 | 16 replies
My experience with meetings that are run by an agenda pitching person, or team, has typically been a waste of time.
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4 May 2018 | 6 replies
The formula(s) would look like:Potential Gross Income (PGI) = full rents + any other income at 100% occupancyminus Vacancy & Collection Losses (8-10%) is typically usedequals your Effective Gross Income (EGI)Then you subtract your operating expenses (taxes, insurance, management & legal fees, repairs, utilities, lawn service, pest control, etc., and a reserve for capex) to get your Net Operating Income (NOI)From your calculated NOI, you can really start digging deep:Subtract your debt service from your NOI to get your cash flowDivide your NOI by the acquisition cost to get your cap rateTake your NOI, add the reserve for capex back in, then subtract your mortgage interest, to get your taxable incomeDivide your NOI by your debt service to get your debt coverage ratio (tells you how many times will your NOI will cover your debt/mortgage payment).
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4 May 2018 | 4 replies
The typical scam is the tell the person they are out of town and to wire money to there attorney to set up a showing.
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4 May 2018 | 10 replies
Typically your responsibility if from the meter to the house, and their responsibility is from the meter back.
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4 May 2018 | 2 replies
That typically doesn't pan out in a residential zone (or at least not well enough for the headache in my opinion).
7 May 2018 | 7 replies
Multi's are typically more expensive than sfr's (single family homes).
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21 June 2018 | 8 replies
If it's a typical hoa lien it does not survive the sale.
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25 July 2020 | 30 replies
Hi Jeff,I can only speak for my area of the country (Seattle, WA) and what is typical out here, 6%.