
18 August 2018 | 105 replies
The C Corp is really no more adminstratively intense than a good LLC properly managed, both are very similar.

30 May 2012 | 15 replies
Sorry to hear about your parents, I dealt with similar situations with both grandparents and parents, I can empathize with your situation.

25 May 2012 | 0 replies
Does any one use other similar sites that might be just as good, but less expensive?

1 November 2013 | 29 replies
[Disclaimer: I'm not trying to devalue or offend anyone that specializes in this type of work]These are my recommendations, similar to others but what I've found works best for me:Domain: Namecheap for under $10/yearHosting: Hostgator.com (Hatchling plan) under $5/month.

28 May 2012 | 21 replies
He told me a story about how he had come to a similar crossroads in his life, but he chose the corporate route.

3 March 2013 | 23 replies
Say If You Buy This House And Find Out It Comes With A Pending Lawsuit Or Something Similar.

20 June 2012 | 7 replies
Your gross rent would be upwards of $2000 per month and your net income would be in excess of $1000 per month, perhaps somewhat more early on before maintenance catches up (initial investment assumes a good rehab.).You would have the cash to pay back the loan if you wanted to rather quickly or you could re invest in similar properties as you accumulated more capital.I am basing my expectations on the 2% 50% guide found on BP and have been exceeding these numbers at least in the short run.these properties are in C areas which I define as lower income working class areas.

22 May 2012 | 4 replies
Where I live, we use kijiji.com which is similar to Craig's List.

10 October 2012 | 8 replies
I've not thought about packing the trailers so tightly, but I guess it would be 0.1 acres per trailer which would be similar to a zero lot line for a stick built - so not unreasonable.

31 May 2012 | 13 replies
Not sure what year they used as their =100 baseline, but the takeaway for me is the country to country comparison.Here Canadian Teranet data (similar to the US Case-Shiller index using matched-pair sales of single family homes) shows house prices have risen at a much faster rate than Canadian per-capita GDP, per-capita income, rents, or inflation.