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5 May 2020 | 5 replies
Again, you can’t be forced to sell , your other option is a cash buyer without an aversion to riskAs @jonathan Greene provided, you can use the pretty standard “distressed sale” verbiage telling the buyer that you have no intention of making any improvements or alterations to the property, and you aren’t even going to do the customary tasks sellers normally do for a transaction — you asked how not to have any liability for this transaction.
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1 May 2020 | 4 replies
In my opinion, the appraiser will appreciate a detailed list of improvements.
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2 May 2020 | 1 reply
Total cost to live here (excluding repairs/improvements etc): $313/month I am basically able to save my whole salary now to purchase my next property.
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1 May 2020 | 3 replies
Short answer is yes, because the way I figure it is there is a certain expense of lost rental income, improvements a "owner user" may want vs "as is" which is "nice for rental property", plus if I can possibly avoid the traditional real estate commissions, and everything else.
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4 May 2020 | 15 replies
Send a comprehensive list of the improvements and the costs to the appraiser.
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4 May 2020 | 28 replies
Because good deals have some aspect of creativity like improving the rent adding another bathroom changing the marketing strategy to improve the Noi,, why were the spread she would have killed the deal
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4 May 2020 | 5 replies
I am assuming a bank would only loan 80% of the appraised value which may not leave $$ for improvements.- use hard money loan for the rehab work- refinance into a new 30 yr mortgage to pay off the HELOC plus HARD MONEY?
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16 May 2020 | 65 replies
Or over-improving with things you "like" vs. best ROI.
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2 June 2020 | 12 replies
But I think sometimes it's hard to remember (at least it was for me when we first started looking) that even if you're estimating -$400 for cashflow, you're still making a decision that probably improves your overall financial position by hundreds of dollars per month compared to your current living situation.
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8 May 2020 | 17 replies
But, I was selling at 6% cap rates when the market improved, and 5% cap rates as the cycle matured.