28 April 2016 | 12 replies
@Mike Hicks once you become a top producing agent you will forget about wholesaling... and any wholesale deals that come to you ... you will keep for yourself...

4 May 2016 | 22 replies
My dad and I also want to develop a family portfolio that will one day benefit me and my sister, who has serious physical illness challenges and could use an inheritance of income producing properties (but of course I want my dad to live as long as possible, and don't want to inherit right away!).

29 April 2016 | 7 replies
I think it was around $35,000, so our down payment was tiny.

29 April 2016 | 6 replies
We all know that multi family has produced the greatest returns and has very strong fundamentals.
29 April 2016 | 1 reply
The master (only) bath is tiny, so it would need to be expanded and/ or a new bath added.

2 May 2016 | 7 replies
Have you heard about the Peak Producer's class with Brian Buffini?

29 April 2016 | 3 replies
Just getting into investing by way of tiny house communities/RV parks.

2 March 2017 | 11 replies
I'm currently a music producer but I've been hustling on the real estate end in between gigs here on BP for sure!

1 May 2016 | 3 replies
I have found a few small lots that are legal to transform into a tiny house hotels, "try before you buy" locations.

7 June 2016 | 57 replies
I have three options:I can sell to my tenant - most of my tenants are interested in home ownership, eventually.I can sell to an investor - I only rent M2M so I can offer a home that produces income or can be vacant in 30 days notice.I can sell to the open market - most of what I own is SFH, so I have a broad market to advertise my house...I can also sell my home below market (because my purchase price is right) to get out quickly if I need to and still make a considerable profit.Multiple properties may incur higher PROBABILITY of a bad thing happening, but it will yield you a higher PERCENTAGE of return on your investment IF you stick to your investment rules.My largest "contrary to the popular belief" is that I buy not to generate large amounts of cash flow (although each property does @Justin Fox brings up a good point that it isn't just what you have left after you pay PITI), but to keep my equity safe and building as I own and maintain the property.