
6 July 2018 | 6 replies
In addition previous owners will never give up their personal attachment to the home and will make for a very difficult landlord/tenant relationship.
4 August 2019 | 3 replies
If I did only do 5% down or even 10% down when I purchase the home will a lender require any additional funds when I refinance or do they only look at what I owe on the home and what the appraisal value is?
9 July 2018 | 4 replies
I have a no pets policy but I'm sure the day is coming when a tenant will appear with a emotional support pony or some such....We are in NH and I seem to remember that, if a rental is a primary residence, the owner has some additional flexibility in the law.Thanks for your insight.Signed - Landlord newbie

6 July 2018 | 1 reply
The seller could get additional mtg.s, liens, judgments against the property and not be able to give clear title.
8 July 2018 | 6 replies
I work a full time job in addition to my property management and I need to tighten up my management.Could anyone suggest some software that could help me do all the things a landlord does (inspections, receipts, finances) but keeping it in one, tidy place?

6 July 2018 | 1 reply
This will allow for greater cash flow while only tying up the down payment -- you can use any other money for additional cash flowing properties keeping diversity of occupancy to mitigate risks.

10 July 2018 | 3 replies
One of the standard setup is to have each property in its own single member LLC in the state of the property.The property LLCs are then owned by a holding LLC in WY or NV to benefit from their good charging order protection.In addition, you would use a C corp as management corporation to take salary (if needed to show steady income for future loan approval), retierement, medical and other fringe benefit.

1 May 2019 | 20 replies
Do NOT put additional money into the property, except for maintenance issues.

21 July 2018 | 8 replies
My wife and I built up just about $10k in personal emergency savings before buying the property but thats personal so I’d rather have some additional right?
7 July 2018 | 4 replies
I am planning a kitchen remodel and master bathroom addition in my fixer upper.