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10 August 2020 | 8 replies
The most common is for acquisition and improvements and it starts when you pay a vendor, let us call it Actual cost.
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8 May 2020 | 6 replies
Hi all,I am 39 years old and currently living in NYC. I am looking to jump into my first rental property... of course, outside of NYC. I currently have a credit score in the low to mid 6s and have roughly 25k in uns...
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16 June 2020 | 12 replies
What I mean is, many people buy the property pretty cheap, make significant improvements to it, and now want to do their cash-out refi based on 75% LTV of the new value.
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19 May 2020 | 53 replies
As time goes on, my systems are improved, my comfort level grows, and I am able to pull the trigger faster, as I learn to recognize what fits my goal easier.
30 April 2020 | 1 reply
Improved kitchen?
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30 April 2020 | 0 replies
Perk is that our tenants are very interested in improving the property, so between what we have done and what they have done, the exterior looks much better than it did when we purchased the property.
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2 May 2020 | 16 replies
If it is an absolute NNN lease, then the landlord should only be responsible for accounting fees (tax prep) and legal fees.Also, you want to read the lease to see if the landlord is responsible for any capital improvements.
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4 May 2020 | 12 replies
I used the rent money that I was collecting to make improvements and later did a cash out refinance to purchase my next property.
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5 May 2020 | 33 replies
Option "D" - improve cash flow by putting more equity into the property...assuming this is an option.
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5 June 2021 | 62 replies
The maintenance and capital improvements are much higher as well.