Robert Leonard
Rejection Proof
10 January 2019 | 0 replies
https://www.amazon.com/Rejection-Proof-Became-Invi...
Adrian Gonzalez
Funding Basics For The Newbies
10 January 2019 | 3 replies
They may want proof of experience.On a buy and hold hard money loan you are looking at 20-25% down Most HML will want 6 months reserves.
John Bennett
How to use TIC to accept 1031 money on a deal
16 January 2019 | 6 replies
We are also requiring a proof of available funds should their 1031 not close on time.
Ian Haas
Stay at home dad starting out
20 January 2019 | 8 replies
Talk to 20 agents, tell them exactly what you want, send proof of funds and they should be able to bring you some good opportunities.
Riley A Holzmeyer
Visiting rental property
13 January 2019 | 2 replies
Hey Riley,I haven't bought a multi family property yet but just things I would think you would want to ask:-If utilities are separately metered- Proof of current rent roll- ask about its vacancy/occupancy history-If there are tenants, verify that they are actual tenants not just bodies to make the property seem like its cash flowing.
Andrew Neal
How many investors went straight into Multi Family?
22 January 2019 | 136 replies
Get your list of buyers together (Private Lender’s)( Proof of funds) Get all your resources together make offers simply get deals under contract.
Tony Crabtree
How do you qualify a young renter?
12 January 2019 | 10 replies
@Tony CrabtreeSee if he can provide you with any proof of income that he didn’t put on his tax returns.
Judy Walsh
Made the decision and bought the first of many
11 January 2019 | 3 replies
Fairly market proof as the university always feeds this rental market regardless of the tourism market trends.
Connor Farrelly
Home Buying After Graduation
11 January 2019 | 2 replies
Keep working until you have proof of income to show a lender, unless you want to build a house of cards on shaky financing that is the way to go.
Riley C.
Debate: Buy or Wait Given Looming Economic Recessionary Fears
15 January 2019 | 45 replies
Your main concerns buying "before a recession" (as if anyone can actually predict the landing) is whether you have enough recession-proof income to ride out bumps and whether you can maintain renters at a reasonable tenancy and payment level if a flood of housing hits the market.