7 November 2025 | 10 replies
Quote from @Bonnie Griffin Kaake: RV parks are treated much like Short-Term Rentals and commercial properties.
26 November 2025 | 11 replies
Same set of rules though, you treat people with respect, get the deal in writing and make sure everybody is as happy as the situation will allow.
5 November 2025 | 3 replies
While it may seem like a small election, a roadblock to progress and prosperity has been removed.Now an investor, a homeowner, or a resident can come to Housing Court and finally be treated with dignity, respect, and equality before the law.
23 November 2025 | 31 replies
Good target—treat it like a math plan.
15 November 2025 | 1 reply
As in - are they treated like furniture or like cabinetry?
25 November 2025 | 44 replies
You’ll need a realtor who focuses on investment properties, a solid property manager who’ll treat your place like their own, and a dependable contractor for small fixes.
3 December 2025 | 17 replies
Keep happy & treat with respect.Some red flags to look at during screening - did they lie?
17 November 2025 | 19 replies
Treat your long term rentals like a business and you will succeed.
6 November 2025 | 2 replies
Be prepared to work your butt off and to sometimes not be treated kindly.
10 November 2025 | 10 replies
I work primarily with investors focused on short-term rental–friendly oceanfront properties, and something interesting has been happening here:Many of my clients are applying a modified BRRRR strategy to dated oceanfront condos — essentially:Buy older, underpriced units in established resorts → Renovate to STR-grade finishes → Rent on Airbnb/VRBO → Refinance after 12–18 months based on new income comps → Repeat with equity pull-out capital.Even though condos can be trickier with financing and HOA dynamics, the math has worked surprisingly well when:The HOA allows STR operations.Renovations target higher ADR and occupancy.The appraisal reflects short-term rental income rather than long-term leases.I’ve noticed this approach works best when you treat each condo almost like a “micro–multifamily” — tracking cash flow, management efficiency, and appreciation just like you would for a small apartment deal.Curious — has anyone else here applied the BRRRR method to condos or coastal properties instead of single-family or multifamily units?