Brian Fiorillo
Purchasing A Property The Current Owner Is Upside Down In
11 May 2020 | 11 replies
They could also find out if they get any information from your county collector's office showing you as the responsible party for paying the taxes.
Lance Castillo
Oklahoma City Balance Sheet/Portfolio Lender
13 May 2020 | 7 replies
By balance sheet or portfolio lender, I mean a lender who keeps mortgages on their balance sheet locally instead of selling it to a third party.
Kristina Bayes
Property Management Company
9 May 2020 | 15 replies
I know realtors have property managers that they will recommend but I would also like to talk to managers that would be recommended by a third party.
Gina Kim
Starting Out While Living in a High Cost Area
23 May 2020 | 25 replies
I always thought it was a bit of a conflict of interest and preferred to buy my turnkey and put a third party PM in there myself.
Carlin Randolph
New Construction Numbers & Analysis
4 June 2020 | 6 replies
Common unforeseen circumstances include, but are not limited to, delays in getting permitting or scheduling an inspection (though an expeditor may assist with this or a third-party engineer if that's permitted by the locality), the quality of the GC/subs/vendors and whether there is transparent and timely communication and conformance with the plans drawn up by the architect/engineer, zoning issues, setbacks/variances, what materials to use for the new builds (e.g., are you going to use cinder blocks or poured concrete for the foundation?)
William Richard Arens
Buying Parent's House to Save the Farm (House Hack)
1 July 2020 | 14 replies
@Paul Ellington I agree with what you, @Heather Skowronsky & @Sudhanshu Singha have recommended - that my parents are better off selling to a third party and attempting to get market value for the property.
Rocky Pe Benito
Fourplex Deal analysis
10 June 2021 | 6 replies
Please do not comment on the legal aspects of it since both parties are already working with their attorneys.Property: Fourplex flat (two 3-bedroom 1-bath, and two 2-bedroom 1-bath with fireplace)Condition: Average, no major repairs expected.Location: Nice area; B-class neighborhoodLocation: Multnomah County, Oregon (not within the City of Portland limit, so less stringent on rules and regs.)Price: $600,000Down payment: Negotiable but I’ll probably put $5,000.00, maybe less.Terms: Seller financing using “Subject To” plus another note for the remaining balance.Seller paid 25% down on a $556,000 purchase price a few years ago.
Brad Bellstedt
So how's the Las Vegas Market?
14 May 2020 | 26 replies
Vegas is driven by CROWDS, and people will not be jumping back to big crowded environments so quickly and I can't picture people at nightclubs and pool parties flirting with masks on LOL Gambling is driven by excess capital, it's hard to say how that will be effected here but with many locals out of work the casinos will be reliant on tourism which I think is going to be a while recovering.
Tony Marcelle
How are people supposed to cash checks?
8 May 2020 | 16 replies
The hardest part is walking to the mail box and pushing that little red flag up.
Alex Mina
Recommendations for BRRRR, Long Distance Real Estate Investing
11 May 2020 | 28 replies
Perhaps a nice 1950's built bungalow.Always hire a 3rd party property inspector to give you an unbiased feel for the home.