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Results (10,000+)
David Crutcher Jr. Bad Situation
14 September 2016 | 11 replies
What is the fate of the sister whose been living there paying the payments and keeping everything up to date?
Jeff M. Looking for Financing for a Non Warrantable Condo
13 September 2016 | 4 replies
-the property is in a non warrantable condo complex-loan size of $70K-$75K-property is rented and has good cash flow-I would prefer a fully amortizing loan (no balloon payment); so preferably a 30 yr with 30 yr amortization but would consider a shorter, fully amortizing loan as well-Looking for a LTV of 75-80%The deal size is too small for a lot of lenders (including B2R).
Lori Spear Renting homes
20 September 2016 | 3 replies
You can also ask your renter to set up their rent payment as a recurring bill with their bank.
Njeri S. Refinancing Primary Home, Renting it, then Purchasing New One
14 September 2016 | 4 replies
To answer your question, yes you can take cash out of your primary home to use as a down payment on a second house.  
Max H. Avoid 20% Down payment on investment property
14 September 2016 | 3 replies
I closed on that last week and I want to put most of that money into a down payment on another house. 
Mike H. How to utilize a pay-off property for more investment funding?
14 September 2016 | 1 reply
Below are some quick tips about cash out refi vs HELOC/LOCCash out Pros-tax free money-low interest rate-fixed monthly payments unless you choose a variable productCash out Cons-closing costs (couple thousand)HELOC/LOC Pros-tax free -its a line of credit, hence you can use pay back then use again-usually NO closing costs on residential Helocs; there will be closing costs on commericial LOCs-commericial LOC is very fast moving as far as getting funding and refinancing  (Makes it easy to rinse and repeat)HELOC/LOC Cons-higher interest rate-variable rates-monthly payments depend on amount borrowedHope this helps,CB
Tyler Hashimoto New Member from San Diego
18 September 2016 | 10 replies
You can get in with a low down payment and good terms by living in the property.  
Jason Barr Is this what I've heard called "a wrap"?
28 October 2016 | 3 replies
I've read through the contract and will summarize here with simplified numbers (not the actual numbers) what I believe the contract says and follow up with some questions for you more knowledgeable members:1) Purchase Price: $100k2) Initial Down Payment: $10K3) Buyer pays seller monthly payments based on 30 year amort of 90k at 5% which is $484/month4) Remaining principal balance to be paid off on the defined Closing Date (roughly 2 years from now)5) Buyer pays taxes and insurance6) Buyer to provide Seller a Loan Commitment from a Lender on or before the Closing Date7) Seller will transfer Deed when Buyer pays full Purchase Price8) Buyer will pay the Seller's existing monthly mortgage payment that exists on the property, which is $100/month, directly to the bank.
Gene Hardt 25% LTV loan for commerical real estate? Not Balloon.
15 September 2016 | 6 replies
The rent rolls, payment history, and other tenants are good. 
Mas Yoshida Growth Strategy and Self Directed IRA Rules
16 September 2016 | 14 replies
We are looking at easily getting a 15%+ return on that over the long run.One strategy we are working on is getting a loan against one of the ones we ALREADY own free and clear from a private investor and use that for half of the down payment on the new one, essentially putting us back at that 20% from our IRAs that are not already invested in real estate.