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15 December 2013 | 1 reply
You, as a third party (not seller or buyer) wouldn't generally collect 'acquisition fees'.
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25 November 2013 | 6 replies
If you can't you need to 1. dump it or 2. keep it as part of your future second home collections allowing tenants to pay for some of home. :)
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9 December 2013 | 11 replies
One other thing to consider is to verify the seller’s ACTUAL rents collected.
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26 November 2013 | 8 replies
., collecting rent, screening tenants, dealing with move ins and move outs?
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22 May 2018 | 33 replies
I get your point about collecting enough rent so that when you do need to put cash in it's less painful.
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25 November 2013 | 4 replies
Hey everyone,I thought I would start a thread to try and collect everyone's experiences on the best/most effective ways you have cut your expenses on your landlording business.
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25 November 2013 | 1 reply
Just know if you have a certain type of tenant base ongoing rent collections and dealing with their "issues" will be involved.
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27 November 2013 | 19 replies
Clearly you collected paperwork in some attempt to review and understand them.
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15 February 2014 | 4 replies
You are then responsible to collect the balance from said tenant.
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28 February 2014 | 15 replies
But doesn't look very good.Next, in January, you won't be able to collect the payments yourself, you'll need a servicer to collect them under new regulations, that is another federal matter.Next, and strike three, you have an agreement that circumvents foreclosure requirements, now since Texas doesn't allow installment sales, it won't be allowing an installment with any equity amount to require or exempt the foreclosure process, so again, you stepped on it.If you have made any arrangement to convey title after the financing, it's a purchase arrangement and they folks in that house are not tenants, regardless of what you would like to call them, they are buyers, with ownership rights.I'd honestly say you're screwed.