Many of you will hate these numbers (rent), but here in Northern Virginia they seem pretty decent. I'm closing Wednesday on a 2/2 condo. Recent comps are 215K. My price is 154K. It is fairly new (less than 10yrs o...
So far we have used a portfolio based HELOC to fund our acquisitions and rehabs. This has limited us to typically 1 BRRRR deal, 1 Fix and Flip deal per year, or 1 note deal.
With this model I'm limited to the equity...
Hi BP community,
So a partner and I are looking for our first deal but had a question around how we should proceed. We have the funds to offer cash without any loans but would like to then refinance to pull out cash...
I currently live in Playa del Carmen, Mexico and am cashing out my portfolio here to invest in Multi-family in the US. I am originally from Rhode Island (our market is horrible) however I know the New England area wel...
Hi everyone! This is going to be a bit of a brain dump, I appreciate any help!... I'm moving to Nashville to begin residency at the Vanderbilt Medical center. My original plan was to simply rent, but my dad has propos...
I have a decade and a half of experience working for companies as a carpenter and running work. I always did side work for other people. I built a house for myself and got featured in philly magazine, and then got hon...
In real estate, or business in general, you win by solving problems that others can not solve. How do you do that? You must be extremely creative and think outside of the box, and do things others cannot think of doin...
Hi, I'm a sophomore in highschool. I have been listening to the BP Real-estate Podcast for a little over a year and a half now and have read a bunch. I am wondering what I should do going forward to be able to make a ...
If you are starting out in rentals but would like to double the amount of properties every year, how would you do that? Me and an investment partner are about to have our first rental. We want to double the amount of...
This is for an investment property and the interest rate will be 4.125%. I can pay a couple points less and get a 4.5% rate. Does it generally pay off from a cash flow perspective to pay down the rate?