
18 September 2019 | 0 replies
I won't have to come up with HUGE pile of money to crack the whole nut at once and I am still using BRRRR in the end.

19 September 2019 | 1 reply
The grout is cracked on all 4 sides of the tile.

16 January 2020 | 16 replies
You need money for not only for the downpayment but also for closing costs (we had the seller cover most but we still had a tiny bit left), rehab (if you don't do a 203k loan) materials and labor, plus your living expenses (we barely cooked at the beginning since we spent every waking moment with workers and working in the house ourselves so we bought food everyday, we also didn't have a kitchen since we completely gutted the one that was here, and your responsibilities won't stop so you still have to pay credit cards, insurance, internet, etc)-We became BP pro members to use the calculators to analyze deals and we used the heck out of them.

20 September 2019 | 1 reply
If the purchase price from the state was (making up the numbers) $1,000 and $400 was Year 1 taxes and $430 was Year 2 taxes, and $100 was Year 1 interest and $70 was Year 2 interest, and the taxpayer redeemed a month later, he would owe $1,000 plus a tiny amount of additional Year 1 taxes plus a tiny amount of additional Year 2 taxes.

21 September 2019 | 5 replies
If I wanted fresh air in the apartment, I would, however, leave them cracked a few inches at the top and bottom, but I would never leave them all the way open while I am gone for hours at a time.For reference, this apartment is a 2nd floor apartment and on these particular windows there is little overhanging structure to help keep the rain out.

3 December 2019 | 133 replies
My husband and I had been living in a tiny house, then we had another child, then his mom moved in, gasp, and then we got a dog.

15 November 2019 | 2 replies
Is the land big enough to do an addition or build a tiny home in the back?

18 November 2019 | 22 replies
Finally, one plumber told me pipes might have cracked/broken under the ground, as his camera got stopped 50 feet in and came back with mud.....He suggested to either open the floor and fix it thoroughly , or build a pipe on the outside wall and re-route kitchen to the main pipe directly...Both options sounds horrible to me....Any advice please?

16 December 2019 | 7 replies
Your return is tiny for the hassle of section 8.

23 November 2019 | 1 reply
I am looking for a Structural Engineer in Tucson to evaluate cracks in a brick wall.