
20 October 2019 | 11 replies
I know the population/job growth is strong and I know the area well as well as rent ranges, etc… So investing out of town is…well… scary to me.My wife and I are also at a point right now where a major drop in income would hurt our current path of paying down debts and cards built up over years of life stuff.So all this being said, what would you all do in this position?

17 October 2019 | 6 replies
If you aren't limiting you population then facebook marketplace, zillow and craigslist are effective.

21 October 2019 | 16 replies
This property is in the city limits of Mobile AL which has a metro population of 500000.

17 October 2019 | 3 replies
Significantly more housing units must be added to better meet demand before the market eventually resolves the extreme supply-demand imbalance in a manner that potentially none of the stakeholders prefer.The US population increased through the recent recession, but housing starts plummeted and have been lagging ever since (see below).

17 October 2019 | 10 replies
The city was 392k in population in 1984.

28 January 2021 | 6 replies
They got pushed elsewhere along with a huge population of older people that just didn’t have the time and energy to rebuild so they took their insurance check and left.

21 October 2019 | 17 replies
Areas like Indianapolis, Columbus, and Cincinnati are all great cities to invest in because these cities are all growing in population, have investor friendly laws, and will allow you to purchase potentially 2-4 homes depending on how you leverage your money.

6 October 2019 | 4 replies
I understand I probably picked too much of a niche property, and being in a low population area probably doesn't help.

8 November 2019 | 8 replies
Of course.But will a high tide 5 inches higher than it is now (50 years from now) cause catastrophic destruction or major population shifts in our lifetime?

8 October 2019 | 7 replies
If you're open to any US state, look up those which are landlord friendly versus tenant friendly, have lower tax rates, better economies, growing populations, etc., etc.