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Results (10,000+)
Joseph Ferqueron First investment property
19 September 2025 | 15 replies
Property Condition & Amenities: it’s important to, “Maintain to the Neighborhood.”Key metrics for each Property Class:Class A Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 680+, no convictions/evictions in last 7 years.Tenant Default: 0-5% probability of eviction or early lease termination.Section 8: Class A rents are too high and won’t be approved.Vacancies: 5-10%, depending on market conditions.Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 3-5 years for positive cashflow, but you get highest relative rent & value appreciation.Class B Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 620-680, some blemishes, no convictions/evictions in last 5 years.Tenant Default: 5-10% probability of eviction or early lease termination.Vacancies: 10-15%, depending on market conditions.Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 1-3 years for positive cashflow, balanced amounts of relative rent & value appreciation.Section 8: Class B rents are usually too high for the Section 8 program.Class C Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 560-620, many blemishes, but should have no convictions/evictions in last 3 years.
Christopher Rubio New Member - Exploring Out-of-State Rental Opportunities (CA investor)
2 October 2025 | 35 replies
Property Condition & Amenities: it’s important to, “Maintain to the Neighborhood.”Key metrics for each Property Class:Class A Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 680+, no convictions/evictions in last 7 years.Tenant Default: 0-5% probability of eviction or early lease termination.Section 8: Class A rents are too high and won’t be approved.Vacancies: 5-10%, depending on market conditions.Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 3-5 years for positive cashflow, but you get highest relative rent & value appreciation.Class B Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 620-680, some blemishes, no convictions/evictions in last 5 years.Tenant Default: 5-10% probability of eviction or early lease termination.Vacancies: 10-15%, depending on market conditions.Cashflow vs Appreciation: Typically, 1-3 years for positive cashflow, balanced amounts of relative rent & value appreciation.Section 8: Class B rents are usually too high for the Section 8 program.Class C Properties:Tenant Pool: Majority of FICO scores 560-620, many blemishes, but should have no convictions/evictions in last 3 years.
Sam Obar Anybody who can help me analyze multi-family opportunities I am looking at in TN?
23 September 2025 | 2 replies
Thank you.Hey Sam, I would recommend contacting agents in the major metro areas near your potential leads to see if they can help.
James McGovern Market shifting towards buyers and silliness in home inspection
23 September 2025 | 3 replies
Usually reports consist of 2 sections. 1 that are immediate and/or major issues, and 1 that are minor issues. 
Ladarius Payne Serious About Real Estate | Looking to Connect with BRRRR Investors & Mentors
27 September 2025 | 8 replies
A simple BRRRR is really not possible today, you can get close if you do a major renovation then wait until rates come down to the 5s.
John Garb Would it be a mistake to sell $60k of stocks from a brokerage?
2 October 2025 | 4 replies
My oldest also just recently started kindergarten, so I have major daycare savings from that ($1250) and my other kid is done in June 2027, which is in sight and will have similar savings. 
Brandon Lee How Investors Are Getting Their First Fix & Flip Financed
2 October 2025 | 4 replies
Every lender has slightly different requirements, but here are some of the common criteria we look for:Property Ownership / Purchase Agreement – You’ll need to show either a purchase contract or proof of current ownership if it’s a refinance.Exit Strategy – Whether it’s a flip, refinance into long-term financing, or a sale, the lender wants to understand how the loan will be paid off.Credit Profile – While perfect credit isn’t required, most lenders will still check for recent bankruptcies, foreclosures, or major delinquencies.Down Payment / Skin in the Game – Typically expect 20% down on a purchase. 
Michael Braswell Lender Insight - How Fix-and-Flippers can win in a tough market
1 October 2025 | 2 replies
., net-7 on verified milestones) in exchange for pricing and priority.Test small jobs first; promote trades to your A-list only after on-time, on-budget performance twice.Standardize to reduce wasteCreate repeatable finish schedules (same trim profile, faucet line, paint palette) so crews work faster and leftovers are reusable.Pre-kit jobs: one delivery per room (box includes all hardware, fixtures, and consumables).Contracting disciplineUse fixed-scope, milestone-based contracts with:Progress draws tied to inspections/photosNo deposit or minimal mobilizationLien waivers at each drawDaily liquidated damages for missed deadlines (after grace period)Written change order policy with price + time impact before work proceeds2) Time: Move Faster to Reduce Carry and RiskFront-load planningWalk the property with all key trades before closing; finalize scope, bids, and schedule ahead of day 1.Pull permits early; choose scopes that avoid structural or major MEP reroutes when timelines matter.Sequencing & overlapSchedule parallel workstreams (e.g., exterior/landscaping while interior demo proceeds).Use a Gantt chart (even a simple spreadsheet) to track trade start/finish, dependencies, and buffers.Daily control15-minute stand-up with GC or project lead each morning (photos + punch list).Two inspections/week: one quality, one progress vs. schedule.Keep critical spares on hand (breakers, valves, GFCIs, common trim, extra boxes of flooring).Tech + templatesSimple tools (Google Drive + shared photo folders, or apps like Buildertrend/Jobber) for scope sheets, punch lists, and photo proof.Use QR codes in rooms linking to the finish schedule for fewer “what goes here?”
Mona V. Any suggestion for this door
21 September 2025 | 4 replies
You would look better with door from the ding section of a major retailer or habitat than anything you do with this one. 
Linda Pham Houston Midterm Rentals
18 September 2025 | 9 replies
Most any major metro area is going to have good demand for medium-term rentals.