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2 April 2020 | 3 replies
. $1,305.65 monthly payment.Four 2bed 1 bath units currently rented at ~$750/month, researching rents supports charging $1,000 month rents.Total Annual expenses: $3,920 Tax (actual), $1,000 (insurance), $1200 water (actual), $800 trash (actual), Capex/reserves $2,400 or $9,360 annual expenses. $9,360+ $15,667 = $25,027.Gross Rent- Gross annual expenses ($36,000-$25,027= $10,972)CoC= $10,972/$100,000= 10.97% on current rents or 22.97% at marketMy goal is to get the rents to market.
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4 April 2020 | 9 replies
If a tenant runs the water 24/7 might as well sign a blank check.
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2 April 2020 | 7 replies
I was doing some searching of my own to dig more into this and saw that they listed 4 units could be up to $1,472,500, but that there was no limit for single family homes with the new blue water navy act.
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2 April 2020 | 9 replies
Maybe 25% of the usual inquiry amount and I usually hold open houses, but can't do that now, so I don't know how it would have compared.I've had no problem with my usual contractors coming in to work solo to clean the carpets or get the hot water heater replace.For rent day, it was all the same.
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2 April 2020 | 0 replies
Upon taking down drywall we found a lot of water damage and many framing issues that are against current code standards - headers and floor joists had to be replaced, the back of the house had to be jacked up 2 inches across a 40 yard span.
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22 April 2020 | 4 replies
Upon taking down drywall we found a lot of water damage and many framing issues that are against current code standards - headers and floor joists had to be replaced, the back of the house had to be jacked up 2 inches across a 40 yard span.
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6 April 2020 | 70 replies
As long as you have a mortgage that doesn't put you under water, you should be able to hold on to property forever.
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14 April 2020 | 6 replies
The sewer and water lines from the street to the house may be old and needed to be replaced.
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7 April 2020 | 3 replies
I was looking for the answers on the Philadelphia Water Department Website but I am confused about what the minimum requirements are that will allow myself and my developers to benefit from the 25% density unit bonus.