
8 June 2024 | 16 replies
You could do a letter or something not much time and cost to see if they bite.

7 June 2024 | 2 replies
Now that we a vacant home I can’t find any official Letters.

6 June 2024 | 1 reply
I finally received a demand letter from a "nonprofit attorney" representing the tenant, claiming that the tenant was living in uninhabitable conditions—typical for a non-paying tenant, I guess—and now she wants to "renegotiate" the rent and keep living in the same space.She has been filing complaints with various government departments, but all the cases were minor and have been closed.

7 June 2024 | 11 replies
Google needs a physical building to designate as your "business" They will send you a letter or something to your airbnb address and then it will come with a code.

7 June 2024 | 10 replies
As a manager, all I need is a letter from the owner that they are no longer having us manage the property and I can use that to get the reservations cancelled penalty free.

7 June 2024 | 8 replies
You will need a real estate specific Texas licensed attorney to draft the sub-to offer...unless you just want to broach the subject with the seller via a Letter of Intent.

8 June 2024 | 17 replies
Then I open mine and show them and watch them ask the others who stammer and flutter and come up with some excuses about where the letter is.
5 June 2024 | 20 replies
Is it worth getting a real estate lawyer, sending a demand letter, going to small claims court, suing, or doing anything like that?

5 June 2024 | 2 replies
I sent a letter to a western Wisconsin homeowner in foreclosure.

5 June 2024 | 3 replies
Things I've got down to minimal effort or fully automated: * Rent, security deposit, and fee collection* Basic accounting and tax packet creation* Listing vacancies* Lease signing* Applications, credit, and background checksThings I'm still dealing with directly ad-hoc or don't have a well defined process or solution in place for:* Requests and communication with tenants* Finding and coordinating service providers for maintenance and repair work* Scheduling showings and getting prospective tenants to make their appointments* Tenant turnover for move in and out* Keeping up with legal changes and lease template updates* Setting rent amounts* Lease enforcement - tenants are responsible for things like yardwork, routinely get letters from the city about weeds / tall grass, etc.Questions for the group:* What am I missing if I were to make out a checklist of an "automated property"?