Chris Luksha
Looking to get financials from potential seller....
19 May 2017 | 7 replies
Is there an account or two that he could potentially export for me to import into a trial version of Quicken rental manager and get a better realistic look?
Karin Crompton
Has anyone painted laminate countertops with success?
24 October 2016 | 12 replies
My fear is the home depot version would start chipping after 6 months of use.
Barbara Long
Giving contractor a % of profit?
10 December 2014 | 5 replies
Contractor Agreement (not a JV agreement) does a version of this strategy in each of his projects.
Anne Grello
Advice?? Placing multiple offers, but no takers
7 March 2023 | 41 replies
Ok, this is going to be a hair off topic here but I will try to equip with the short-short version (crash course).
Richard Griswold
No Primary Residence DSCR Lenders
8 November 2022 | 16 replies
Look into other similar versions of “DSCR Loans” like… no and low doc, non qm… I wish I knew about the flexible variety of lenders that’s out there sooner.
Katherine Earle
Aggressive Inherited Tenant
3 January 2024 | 24 replies
This guy already emailed me "his version" which definitely left out the parts where he was banging on the machines and adding lots of expletives.
Shyam Sah
Property Management Software / Company
10 October 2023 | 14 replies
Although there is a free version, I pay $50 per month because I integrate it into QuickBooks for full financial reporting.
Matt Kampf
New Investor from Houston - BP Pandemic
17 April 2016 | 14 replies
My wife and I stared with google maps (not the lite version but the one you can edit) from there I created a 10 mile radius from my current residence.
Paul Munly
Portland, OR Landlords -- Please Take Note
27 October 2017 | 66 replies
The other type of appeal that might have worked is if we could demonstrate that the ordinance is structurally invalid, in violation of some greater rule or law, the local version of unconstitutional.
Zamir Kazi
Are Tax Deed Sales Lucrative?
31 May 2017 | 98 replies
The short version is, the IRS has 120 days to redeem the property (i.e. to pay you what you paid).