
13 October 2020 | 2 replies
That's why i needed my sisters help initially.

14 October 2020 | 12 replies
I think the point @Nathan G. was making initially was about the intrusion of our "partner" in STR into our lane of business (correct me if I got that wrong, Nathan).

4 November 2020 | 20 replies
offer him a preferred interest payment for using his money.......on the net....then split it 50/50.so if he put up 100K.....you net 100K....lets say you offered him 10% on his money......after his initial investment was given....he would be owed 10K out of that 100k Net.....then it would leave 90K.....yaw would then split the 90k 50/50.......so in the end he would have 55k.....and you would have 45k.......because you offered him 10% interest on his money

15 October 2020 | 43 replies
I can say I have already achieved my initial number in three years, and unlike other investments this number will always stay same or go higher.

14 October 2020 | 10 replies
SD market is tough for cash flow, at least when you initially purchase the home.Your best bet is a live in flip / house hack, meaning you buy a house in need of some love in a nice neighborhood at a discount, fix it up and then house hack.

16 October 2020 | 2 replies
At such a low purchase price you'd likely be able to refi a good amount of your initial investment out of the property and start cash flowing as long as you find tenants.

25 October 2020 | 9 replies
I appreciate the 1% rule of thumb for analyzing the BRRRR method. which was my ultimate goal initially.

17 October 2020 | 5 replies
The initial single family would be the one I would live in in this case.

14 October 2020 | 5 replies
The difference in cashflow between the two is $187 a month or roughly $2237 annually My question is, if I can use that 30k to purchase another property that brings in at least the same annual return, is it worth to run my profits that low on the initial investment?

14 October 2020 | 5 replies
If they get too high find someone else.You can use sites like Takl.com to find your initial handyman or HVAC person.