David M.
Will the HOA know if I am owner occupied?
6 June 2016 | 6 replies
For that matter, join the board (just make sure the O& D insurance is sufficient) and then strike when the iron gets hot.
Kevin B.
Out of State Landlords: Alternatives to Realtors to Screen/Show?
4 June 2016 | 9 replies
I think MLS listing (at least in my area) as a dud, and a CL/ Zillow/HotPads listings as sufficient with expedient screening and showing.
Darryn Dunn
Cost to Add Central A/C?
3 June 2016 | 4 replies
They are small 2/1 units so I'm assuming 2-ton units should be sufficient.
Roy Gutierrez
Renter leaving at the end of the month, big demand
6 June 2016 | 16 replies
Warning the tenant to lock up their valuables may not be sufficient if their "Rolex" turns up missing.
Brian Brzycki
finding a good insurance provider
8 June 2016 | 4 replies
If you still disagree, you can always take the matter to the states insurance commissioner and they can help resolve disputes, although the vast majority of claims never get anywhere near this point?
Laurenda Landry
Foreclosures in Texas
9 June 2016 | 13 replies
Yes, there are a bunch of one off situations but for the vast majority of normalness, you don't work with the bank directly.
Julio Cardenas
Mini split system for my rental property???
15 May 2018 | 23 replies
follow up to the last post, is a single wall unit sufficient to cool other rooms assuming I get a large enough unit?
Kent Schmuland
Advice about being a broker on the side
20 June 2016 | 8 replies
I am compelled by the vast opportunity and intricacies there are to learn.
Chuck Williams
Advice on purchasing an apartment building
14 June 2016 | 9 replies
Chuck Williams commercial lending with look for a sufficient debt service coverage ratio to quality your deal.
Tamas Z.
Best ways to handle triple-net where "area%" is not a fair split
17 June 2016 | 3 replies
My basic question is, what are the recommended strategies for dealing with situations where the regular triple-net "pay prorated to rentable space area" isn't actually the fair split.Specifically, I've got two roughly-equal-sized spaces, but one of them is a business that contributes the vast majority of the electrical bill, and having them split it evenly with the other tenant, in standard triple-net fashion, doesn't seem right.One option I've been considering is to just have the meter split, so each of the units just gets their own bill, and then the electric bill is just no longer part of the operational costs equation.