Daniel E.
NPL home insurance - prior to force-placed to avoid damage
24 April 2018 | 4 replies
Yea it's common for hazard events (e.g., fire).
Prakash B.
Tenant is stealing electricity
1 May 2018 | 16 replies
@Prakash Bhatta The two most common ways people steal electricity are: 1) by tampering with the electrical panel and bypassing the meter 2) or by fraudulently establishing service in someone else's name (i.e. identity theft) and then not paying the bill and just running it up until the service is shut off due to non-payment.
Jo Zhou
Urgent, Help, Potential Tenant with Pitball
27 April 2018 | 134 replies
If it was a normal state, I wouldn't be worried so much about litigation, but in California common sense went up in smoke years ago.
Jeff Betschart
Can anyone give me a reference on working w/Sean Tarppenning?
14 November 2018 | 14 replies
For the 18 months that I hired them for their services, they have charged me over $11,000 for maintenance, repairs, & upkeep of this home.
Chad C.
Inherited tenant has litter of dogs. What to do?
24 April 2018 | 10 replies
By having them be there so long, have you really been delaying long term Capex and maintenance issues to the point that you are actually going to cost yourself more $$ because you put that stuff off too long?
Timothy Hall
Ready to get my feet wet, first steps?
9 May 2018 | 5 replies
have a solid idea of your market ie rents, types of tenants, property taxes, sewage and water rates, insurance rates, cap ex and maintenance expenses, good parts of town vs bad parts of town.
Trina P.
[Calc Review] Help me analyze this deal
24 April 2018 | 4 replies
Lower cash flow rates are a common side affect of the BRRRR strategy.
Greg Mayer
Poison ivy removal advice
2 May 2018 | 5 replies
I would advise you to get ready to do all of your lawn maintenance yourself.
Brian Henry
[Calc Review] Help me analyze this deal
24 April 2018 | 2 replies
Notice that all properties in this analysis except one are B class or greater & have almost no deferred maintenance.
Jeff Long
How to calculate cash on cash return and cash flow using HELOC
25 April 2018 | 1 reply
There aren't many 2 car garages in the area that are this usable (some are mostly unusable).Initial Repairs: $7-10k (mainly new paint, carpet, lower cabinets in the kitchen, glass block in basement and upstairs bathroom, updating bathroom)Expected Rent: $700/mo (probably doing Section 8)Expenses = $310/mo (based on items below).10% Property Management: $70/mo10% repairs/maintenance: $70/moRE Taxes: $35/moInsurance: $57/mo10% Cap X: $70/moI've used different real estate calculators but since they ask for the information differently I seem to be getting different numbers for my cash on cash returns and cash flow.