Investment Info:
Single-family residence buy & hold investment in Aberdeen.
Purchase price: $65,000
Cash invested: $55,000
At 18 Aberdeen Ave, a frozen-in-time townhome, our renovation adventure ...
Introduction:
Investing in multi-family properties can be a lucrative venture, but it's essential to carefully evaluate the condition of the property before making a purchase. Older multi-family properties, in partic...
So, I kind of got a slow start into the whole personal finance game. About 6 months ago, I finally decided that I was going to start budgeting. My end goal being debt free. As of right now, I’m on track to have everyt...
Goal: to build houses ourselves.
My husband and I want to one day build houses ourselves and teach others how to build houses for themselves. I am a licensed agent but don’t want the traditional realtor path.
Bu...
Greetings BP!I'm going to be forming an LLC with my investing partner (Hi, Mom!) to protect her assets. What I'd love some feedback on is an equitable equity split. We can both bring cash to the table, in roughly equa...
Hey everyone!
I'm actually NOT that new to biggerpockets. I listen to all the podcasts (AWESOME info) and I had a business account. I wasn't able to do much with it, so I FINALLY got around to creating a pe...
Hello,I have not seen much in terms of case studies of $2M+Rehabs in the Bigger Pockets Forums so I wanted to contribute a little bit: My partner and I primarily organize joint ventures with developers on ground up co...
Hi All, Newbie here! We are about to complete the rehab on our first long-term rental (5/1)! My question is: do we list it now for rent available as of 5/1 and if so how do we deal with the people that want to come...
Our company has 16 properties within 10 LLCS. We have been using a desktop version of quickbooks and each entity had its own file. Generally there are not many transactions but each has its own bank account and some...
Good morning! What's the BEST way (if any) to find an equity partner? Just good ol' fashioned networking or is a hard money lender more realistic? Thanks!