
7 January 2025 | 8 replies
Most of the private lenders we deal with don’t require appraisals, never set foot on any of the properties they finance for us and, best of all, often finance 100% of the purchase price and renovations.

30 December 2024 | 1 reply
Financial Highlights•Acquisition Price: $72,000•Renovation Costs: $35,600•Total Investment: $107,600•Funds: raised from personal savings and private lender How did you add value to the deal?

31 December 2024 | 1 reply
If you can save money and renovate and the ARV allows you to pull your intial capital out sooner, I say go for it!

30 December 2024 | 7 replies
Unless you are confident in estimating the renovations needed, I would highly recommend getting a contractor's professional opinion of the rehab costs.

21 February 2025 | 250 replies
Latino crews on the track homes , and a mix on custom homes and renovations .

6 January 2025 | 8 replies
FHA allows the construction or renovation of an ADU on the property by refinancing into a 203k loan, but the property must remain your primary residence.This stuff is subject to change, lender specific, and subject to other factors.

3 January 2025 | 12 replies
If properties in that area tend to appreciate more slowly, especially if you can't start renovations immediately, you may sit on that investment watching potential profits get eaten away at slowly as inflation passes appreciation.

30 December 2024 | 4 replies
My idea is to find another buyer who has cash i.e. their own funds, access to hedge funds etc I just don't know if I should list it on MLS or where to find this type of buyer quickly any ideas for a super quick sale this would be as is the title is already ran and I just did renovations on both properties?

4 January 2025 | 25 replies
I can add value to RE by adding a bathroom, renovating the kitchen, ADU, etc.

9 January 2025 | 46 replies
The guy who claims he is the country's biggest wholesaler and has a "community" says in his video from yesterday Dec 31 (search #251 Wholesale Hotline | LIVE Real Estate Investing Q&A if interested in his "technique" start at 0:39:00 that the most recent transaction he did Was bailing out a guy in foreclosureGuru "bought" the house for $375,000 from the guy in foreclosureSold it back to them for $498,000 with a 6 month buy back option periodSeller had to give him $20,000 for the optionSo, guru will make about $148,000 on the transaction "Never been to the house, never had to lift a finger""No renovation, the guy is still in the house"Is this the kind of thing the new Oregon law is intended to address?