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Results (10,000+)
Leland S. How much to put into rehab?
24 September 2016 | 23 replies
I would assume you will need to pull permits and etc so you can register and sell it as the comps, your area .
Bob Collett Wholesale Markup
16 September 2016 | 6 replies
We agree to my assignment fee and close the deal.
Ben C. Interior Demolition Question
17 September 2016 | 10 replies
If you are replacing the main service as well, they need to pull a temporary pole as noted by @Aaron McGinnis or use a generator.
Jason Krick First Deal!!! LLC, Commercial Loan and 401(k) Loan?!?!?!?
26 December 2016 | 19 replies
This may be a long post, but I thought it would be good to walk through everything step-by-step, and explain my thinking along the way.If you want to stick with me through it all, here we go:I was not going to be getting a conventional mortgage for my first property for a number of reasons.First, I am still annoyed at the hoops I had to jump through to get a mortgage for my primary residence.Second, my liquid cash was on the lower end.Third, the properties that I would need to start out with would not be financeable anyway.Fourth, my DTI is on the high side, due to the decision that we made to take out a HELOC to complete interior improvements on my primary house.So, I decided that my path was going to be to form a single member LLC, and take a loan from my 401(k) at work to finance the down payment.Since I do not view the 401(k) loan as a long-term solution, I am treating like hard money, and pay it off ASAP.So, my first deal would be a flip, or a rental that was such a good deal, that I could re-fi out and pull all my cash out.I decided to reach out to the commercial lending department of the local credit union, which I am a member.The person I talked to (who became my lender) is fantastic.I told him what types of properties I was looking for, and that I’d look to turn them into rentals, or to flip them.I will never forget his response, which reminded me why I love this credit union.He said:“Typically, the deals you are talking about are much smaller than the deals we like to do.However, we also realize that you can not get to that level unless someone helps you get there.So, if the numbers make sense, we will see if any of our products fit.”Awesome!
Lyuba Barrington Got good lead, now what?
16 September 2016 | 6 replies
Pull comparables of similarly distressed properties that have recently sold; use a rehab checklist to get a rough idea of repair cost, and emphasize that a cash offer will move closing process much faster.  
Amanda Moore Feel like giving up!
23 September 2016 | 40 replies
Do they typically do this for a fee?  
Drew Oberholtzer Financing for a $30,000 invesment property
16 September 2016 | 6 replies
What are my options if I'd like to pull money out of the house for future investment properties.  
Nate S. Getting Prospective Tenants to Trust You When Managing from Afar
15 September 2016 | 5 replies
I just had a property turn over and followed this procedure for the showings:I advertise the property and handle all calls, emails, texts on it and set up viewing appointments (I group them all within 30-45 minutes on one day)The current tenants show the property to prospective rentersWhen someone applies, they email or fax in the application and pay the application fee via PayPal (although I am now trying out Cozy for applications) and I process the applicationIf the application passes, I prepare and email over the lease for signatureWhen the lease is signed and sent back to me, I send over a payment request for the first month's rent (via Dwolla or Cozy)At the check-in, I drive to the property to check them in myself and collect the security deposit in secured funds (or use Cozy to collect it beforehand)I have been doing the above for a long time and it has worked pretty well.
Edwin Farmer Due Diligence On Private Lender
19 September 2016 | 14 replies
If he is legit, then he shouldnt need anything from you up front (maybe a small $100 application fee at most)Use an escrow service.  
Jane Guerreso Landlord does not report our ontime rent. Impact on our credit?
15 September 2016 | 4 replies
Chances are that there would be a monthly fee to report the payment that you would more than likely have to pay.