Jeff N.
Do you pay for yearly maintenance checks on your rental Heat/Air units or wait until they fail?
21 November 2011 | 7 replies
This, again, allows for sufficient airflow for that unit to work properly.
Vikram C.
first profitable deal
9 June 2010 | 15 replies
Are you purchasing the property with sufficient room to generate a profit?
Claudia Schmidt
How much do you charge for late fees? And when?
2 September 2010 | 12 replies
An extra $75 hit is sufficient motivation to come up with the rent on time.
Andy M
Apartment complex loans, ~1mm - 2mm
27 June 2008 | 3 replies
The criteria is simple:1) Seller MUST be willing to work with Buyer to optimize Commercial DPA.2) Property must have sufficient equity in order to structure the DPA into the purchase.
Greg P.
House blew up and foundation is left - Is this a deal?
11 October 2011 | 17 replies
You didn't mention if the parcel was on city services, but if not, you will want to be sure there is a sufficient well and septic system.
Shane Woods
What to offer on FSBO (if at all)
9 December 2011 | 8 replies
One thing I can say....Private Money/Hard Money Lender will not give you a loan unless their is sufficient equity (atleast 35-40%) in subject property.
Dan N
Please help me with my analysis / plan
25 April 2007 | 2 replies
I have spoken to several realtors in the area and found two important things: Renters have sufficient income to purchase a house if so inclined.. so multifamily housing is preferred for investing.
N/A N/A
What Everybody Should Know... About Commercial Financing!
3 February 2008 | 18 replies
In some cases, you may only need to prove that there is sufficient value in the asset being purchased to give you the 100% financing.
Peter Lee
Availability of home improvement loans in SoCal?
13 January 2010 | 6 replies
Or would the collateral be sufficient?
Charles Kappe
Private money lenders
13 February 2015 | 10 replies
There is one that I'm working with that WILL roll the money into the loan, but they require some form of cross collateral (ie. they put a lien on another property - if you don't have one with sufficient equity - they require you to hold money in an escrow account that's released at the end of the deal).The other part of it is they're usually more stringent than flippers - the majority that I'm qualified for will only lend up to 65% of the ARV - so unless you've good a hot deal you're still out of pocket money.With all that said, they still have their benefits (hence me working with them), but once I've got sufficient cash to do my own deals, I'm cutting them out.If you STILL want some lenders - PM me and I'll refer one or two.