Sean Haran
Inspection report shows significant foundation issues, worth it to look into fixing?
25 May 2024 | 7 replies
The home inspector is just going to tell you what things should be like in a perfect world, its up to you to figure out what that means to you.
Miguel Suarez
I'm Planning To Buy A House Out Of State early 2024 (any suggested states to invest?)
24 May 2024 | 259 replies
I would be happy to have a conversation about Indianapolis.
Fran Pratt
Newbie (3 doors) Needs a Pep Talk
24 May 2024 | 17 replies
I own a fractional interest in over 2,500 units today, and I don't have to hassle with tenants or lenders or inspectors or insurance or contractors or property managers.
April Eilers
If septic is undersized is upgrade required prior to sale?
23 May 2024 | 3 replies
@April Eilers My septic inspector always tells me there’s no septic police in our state.
Mathew Morford
Rehab trends to use
24 May 2024 | 11 replies
Indianapolis has- farm house/ranch/Victorian/Craftsman/American foursquare to name a few of 80 types.
Ian Tyndall
Deal / Property Analysis - How to maximize revenue potential?
24 May 2024 | 11 replies
I will get more photos from the inspector.
Mark C.
Asbestos abatement and testing
23 May 2024 | 9 replies
2) I am having trouble finding an inspector that will identify asbestos.
Phil C.
Section 8 inspection - no inspection in 2+ years- is this common?
23 May 2024 | 3 replies
I did see a post where the landlord was fined $500, because no inspection was done as the tenant forgot and wasn't home to let the inspector in and the landlord was never notified.
Allen W.
Wort Tenant Ever - Baltimore
23 May 2024 | 14 replies
The inspector generals office supposed to be doing an investigation.
Allen Bannister
5% conventional house hack advice needed
24 May 2024 | 15 replies
Assuming I had the experience, I would only buy a place with structural issues if I had 1) an experienced and trusted structural engineer telling me a clear, and verifiable explanation of the cause(s) of the problem and a viable and affordable solution, 2) trusted and experienced tradespeople who would be implementing the solution (carpenter, mason, etc.) confirming with me that they could fix the issue (with 90% or higher confidence that the issue could be resolved within budget), and 3) confirmation from city inspectors that the issue (and an inability to fix the issue) would not result in condemnation/revocation of occupancy permits. ...and even then, I'd only proceed if I had the cash reserves to ride out a major series of unexpected problems (e.g.; time overruns, budget overruns, unexpected revocation of occupancy permits from the city, etc.)