David Krulac
Buying a house is still the best investment....
20 July 2014 | 8 replies
Around a $150,000 house might rent for $1,250, but a $1,000,000 could be rented for $4,000 to $5,000.The national articles are written in general terms and not in terms of local markets, different price ranges, different appreciations and different local economies.I put little credence in any general national article.
Account Closed
HUD Foreclosures
18 July 2014 | 5 replies
Our agent did say that he read in the agent remarks that this was no offers under Sales Price would be considered, so maybe its not so bad of a situation.
Roger Lin
Would you invest strictly for cash flow?
19 July 2014 | 17 replies
Once I build a good base I will up the price range I buy in which will probably lead to appreciation.
Leigh C
What is fair compensation for a project manager.
4 December 2016 | 17 replies
I'm a PM by trade, and know their skillets and quality range greatly.
Holly Rust
REO Price
24 July 2014 | 18 replies
If they are, I'm not sure the areas of HEB that support your price range are going to be where you want to be.
Sean Connolly
Raising Rent
1 August 2014 | 22 replies
I am with the general feel that you should get on the $575 people if the market rent is $800, and not to mess with the $750 too much if you otherwise think they are good residents.For the way under unit I'd do something in that $50-75 range at most.
Account Closed
What do you offer as Ernest money on foreclosures ??
27 July 2014 | 24 replies
However I have never put up 10% EM, my range has been a low of $500 to a high of $2,000(and that was a $58k purchase).
Nicholas Brandenburg
Is my first deal outline for my business plan and checklist suitable?
31 July 2014 | 5 replies
This is another place where a building inspector could help warn you about any major repairs that may be coming due in the near future (new roof, new heating/AC, etc)Property Filter strategyProperty must be in price ranges of 25000 to 675,000 with the maximum including repairs.Must be maximum 25 years oldMust NOT have nearby UN-clean properties Ex/ non maintained lawn, crumbling roof/structure, torn gates, abandoned cars and possible current crime related houses Must not have major issues or structure issues,examples include an unstable foundation, and big holes in the roof or walls.Seller must be willing to pay 50 percent closing costsMust not have taxes that go over 8250 annually Must have at least 25% in equityMust have the potential rent value of at least 500Must not have more than 2 mortgages on the propertyDocumentation to ask the seller for:Leases/rents for the past year, Tenant applications and screening procedures, tax returns for the past 2 years, also income and expenses for the past year, current rent roll (including unoccupied units, unpaid rents, and concession losses), List of improvements on property in the last 10 years.Documentation of all loans against propertyAvoid all illegal conversions or constructions.Avoid houses with no electrical wiring or AC or plumbing or if these criteria are severely damaged.Property must have cash flow of at least a total of 100 dollars.Plan for Financing At 18 years of age I will start investing in Multi homes with a loan called 203b mortgage (an FHA loan).This will allow me to only put up 3.5 % as a down payment and have a very low interest rate of around 3.5-3.9%.This loan requires me to live in the property for 1 year + though and have mortgage insurance, and so I will live in one unit while my other 1 or 2 units are rented out while I attend college.My down payment and closing costs will be from saved money from jobs in fast food and other work areas from beforehand.I will use 30 year fixed rates.Steps to take in the whole process:Have my attorney write up my contracts beforehand which include ways to exit before closing, financing terms, closing costs being 50/50 split , make sure the sellers future property info is accurate and reliable or else he is accountable and everything else he/she recommends Have my loan prequalified beforehandMake a lowball offerNegotiate until an offer is accepted or you have hit the buying price limit, or the 70% ruleOnce an offer is accepted inspect the house thoroughly by an appraiser and an inspector and take lots of pictures and videosrequest these forms:Leases/rents for the past year, Tenant applications and screening procedures, tax returns for the past 2 years, also income and expenses for the past year, current rent roll (including unoccupied units, unpaid rents, and concession losses), List of improvements on property in the last 10 years.Documentation of all loans against propertyIf the deal is still sweet, go ahead and continue with closing and finalize the deal Hire a property manager with at least 3 recommendations and question him about these areas of work, also ask for a complete list of all past clients contact numbers.
Kelsey Truitt
Starting out in college?
27 July 2014 | 7 replies
I've been looking in the $80,000-$100,000 range and found some decent houses that I could use as rentals.
Muju Hussain
Need advice for buying a second investment property
27 July 2014 | 3 replies
I pulled out the comps for this area, and it is in the $520k range.