Mateusz Piasta
Connected devices in a lease
23 April 2021 | 7 replies
Hey all, I have a general lease and clearly it is outdated with no mention of wifi or connected devices, wondering how you throw in connected/ wifi devices into your new age leases?
Patrick Flanagan
Multi family property lists
29 April 2021 | 5 replies
Instead of getting a general list, I would suggest you define some criteria, what you are looking for: for instance apt. classes (A, B, C, D), neighborhoods (A-->D as well), age of the properties, size (depending on interest and budget) you are willing to invest in.
Robert D Wade III
Free Lunch to Minneapolis Wholesaler
4 March 2021 | 1 reply
Such a great way to start building a portfolio from a young age with as little as 3.5% down.
James Hernandez
Brokerage Advice needed: New Part-time Real Estate Salesperson
8 November 2021 | 9 replies
But with age and family obligations that has been a problem.
Isaac El
Trying to do my first investment - can you help me evaluate deal?
20 July 2018 | 29 replies
And have them guess roughly the age of each and potentially if how much use each of them have left.
Lara Chinarro
How long does a water heater last?
26 July 2018 | 14 replies
At this age it becomes a time bomb that you have no clue when it will go.Like the other said. i also have seen 15 yr+ but i also replaced it as soon as i got the house.
David C.
What do you use for Expense Ratio?
20 January 2024 | 4 replies
You can only ask someone that invests in the same age/type properties in the same market as you.
Bryan Wasniewski
New to Bigger pockets
13 July 2018 | 9 replies
I wish I was your age when I first started learning about RE investing!
Ali Zantout
Closed on my first 2 properties in Kansas city market
23 July 2018 | 10 replies
It started as a dare to myself seeing my brother owning his own home, and since I lived at home and pay rent to my parents and help them around the house due to their old age.
Joseph Lucas Jr
Landlord Tales and cautions
16 July 2018 | 31 replies
Or buy something remodeled and updated and you won't have to worry about it for years.Do a credit check and ask for landlord references to make sure your tenant pays their billsAsk for income verification and time on the job to make sure their ability to pay seems steadyDo a background check and avoid shady characters with a bad historyStart with month-to-month leases so you can get rid of problem tenants quickly and easilyKnow your state's landlord laws so you don't do anything illegal or stupidSearch "Arizona Landlord's Deskbook" to learn them - Luckily it's more investor friendly in PhoenixHave a personal interview with the tenant and go with your gutAnd finally, go in with an understanding that all investments come with risk.