Account Closed
LLC, Co. , None or when
16 June 2018 | 4 replies
The other issue is that you will most likely have higher loan rates and higher down payment requirements (at least 25%) if you try to buy a property under an LLC additionally you may still have to personally guarantee it to the lender under your own name especially if the LLC is not 'seasoned' or over 2 years old.
Ken F.
1 BRRR or 2 properties (financed)
20 June 2018 | 2 replies
Hello BP, looking for some perspective/opinion on which route to take with $50K cash with the goal of long term buy and hold: Pay cash for a BRRR - $50K Purchase (finance) two $100K properties - $50K down payment (in total)For simplicity, assume my numbers/deal are spot on and the cash flow in both scenarios is the same.Pros of 1 BRR – Left out the R for repeat...as I would hold on to the property - No loan, one property (with same cash flow) – slightly less maintenance as only one set of mechanicalsPros of 2 financed properties – Leverage, mortgage paydown by tenant, more potential appreciation (2 vs 1 property)Cons of 1 BRRR – less rehabbed (just rent ready) vs 2 financed TURNKEY propertiesCons of 2 financed properties – lower cash flow per door, paying additional (taxes, insurance)thoughts?
Robert Howard
Three deals don't know how Im going to fund all of them
14 June 2018 | 3 replies
The $35k my mentor bought bc it for a great deal, but it doesn't fit his criteria so he asked me if I want it and he would sell it to me for cost, because he wants to get into another deal; and it fits my investment style.
Cory Gardner
Client looking to invest in LV
18 June 2018 | 7 replies
I've advised my client to do additional research on this.
Bob H.
Tub in new home is backward, with inaccessible faucet and drain
19 June 2018 | 13 replies
In addition, there is no access panel to allow maintenance of the plumbing, which the inspector says is required.
David S.
Odd scenario; Would you consider me as a tenant?
16 June 2018 | 19 replies
In my opinion, prices will be up a year from now, so in addition to spending $24,000 renting, you will lose out on a years worth of property appreciation when you sell.As far as renting to you, I would not.
Israel Hernandez
Hurdles of being self-employed while trying to start in RE
18 June 2018 | 11 replies
If you are an independent contractor with multiple years operating in your business and reasonable consistency in that income (you don't have one year with $30K and one year with $200K and are trying to claim you make $200K) then you need to keep calling lenders until you get one who can work with you, in my opinion.If my real estate side business and my book royalties from Set for Life (next year) can help me qualify for a loan, in addition to my W2 income, then I don't see why someone with consistent income from self-employment is having trouble -- perhaps the trouble is more in demonstrating consistent income from a sustainable source?
Jordan Miller
Looking to start investing in the Louisville area
2 October 2020 | 5 replies
Once again around 70K in savings(plus an additional ~7K in an old 401k i would be willing to take out) and looking for deals but they are tough to find right now.
Kathy Hacmac
Tenant painted original woodwork
18 June 2018 | 20 replies
I am hoping you are correct.I read another post from someone who has the ultimate fixer-upper as a tenant. in addition to that, this one wants everything HER color, and HER style.
Charles Moore
Lenders who count income from house hacking in DTI?
15 June 2018 | 1 reply
But in talking to lenders, I learned they don’t accept rent from spare rooms because it’s in my primary residence, the reasoning behind which I don’t understanding since that’s an extra $2650/month in addition to my W-2 income.