
25 November 2014 | 26 replies
To get the buyer back, consider offering to pay for some or all of the buyer's non-recurring closing costs.

17 August 2015 | 31 replies
It is flexible in setting up recurring automatic payments, or one-time payments, and you can specify who pays the $3 fee, you or the tenant.

17 February 2015 | 12 replies
If you know at the time of offer that the tenant is in violation of their contractual obligations - particularly if this is a continuing ore recurring behaviour, have the Vendor deal with the eviction as a condition of sale.

15 February 2015 | 9 replies
If it's instead that you have 300k to spend and the house is paid off and with social security or other retirement you eek by then I would think about if I want to do that or not.I get it that people want peace of mind but I think that comes more from a recurring income stream.Can you imagine having 100k,200k, 500k a year coming in from investments and you only live off of 70k??

14 June 2012 | 3 replies
Question 2: Does the management company pay the recurring (mortgage, insurance, taxes, fines, etc) out of the management account, or must the management company transfer funds to the owning entity and then a check is cut from the owning entities account?

12 August 2014 | 16 replies
Believe it or not, these overbroad assignments have become a recurring problem.

19 August 2014 | 0 replies
The math I've done for G) is below:Assuming MIP and property tax are included in 50 % rule, it seems I should aim for a mortgage of about 210,0003 units at 850=2550Assume 1275 for operating expenses (vacancy, evictions, utilities, advertising, tenant damage above security deposit, mortgage insurance, property taxes, regular insurance, repairs when things break down, etc...)Assume 1275 to go toward the mortgageAssume 6% mortgage at 30 years with a 210,000 loan=1259 monthlyIf we assume that MIPs are NOT included (but property taxes are) it seems I should aim for a mortgage of about 180,0003 units at 850=2550Assume 1275 for operating expenses (vacancy, evictions, utilities, advertising, tenant damage above security deposit, regular insurance, property taxes, repairs when things break down, etc... bot NOT MIP's)Assume 1275 for both the mortgage and the mortgage insuranceMonthly MIP 195 (Annual 1.3%-2340)Assume 6% mortgage at 30 years with a 180,000 loan= 1080 Monthly recurring total for Mortgage and MIP=1275Does the math seem to be somewhat on point?

19 August 2014 | 1 reply
Here's whyThe good:I can set up recurring reminders for them to pay.

13 February 2015 | 54 replies
I put a high value on recurring passive income, whereas I put a much lesser value on larger cash flows that only come once (like building to sell).

23 October 2014 | 14 replies
Maybe he just values the recurring cash flow too highly and thus not rationally for any time value of money calculations with market rates to work out.