31 October 2025 | 6 replies
If you’re switching PMs, confirm who the county recognizes as your official representative before the court date.
10 November 2025 | 23 replies
Turnkeys can actually be a solid option, especially if you’re working with the right team and market.
27 November 2025 | 8 replies
Well, Pricelabs already took care of those dates!
21 November 2025 | 0 replies
Hey everyone, I’m a local investor-friendly agent and property manager here in the Greensboro / Triad area. I know a lot of people ask about rent comps, so here’s what I’m seeing right now for 2–4 unit properties:
...
9 November 2025 | 5 replies
I’m trying to figure out how realistic this idea is before I start talking to lenders — hoping some of you who’ve been through this can help me sanity-check it.Here’s my current situation:The PropertyLocated in California’s Central ValleyBought a few years ago from my dad for $30K (clear title)Current estimated value: around $293,500 (Zillow)Rents: $1,000 (front) + $800 (back) = $1,800/moNo mortgage, completely paid off ✅It’s been a basic rental that covers itself and stays occupied.Now that it’s appreciated quite a bit, I’m wondering if I can use it to fund my next step in real estate.What I’ve Gathered So FarI was laid off a while ago, so I don’t have W-2 income anymore — but I do have savings in the bank and this property free and clear.While researching options, I came across DSCR or “no-income verification” loans, where the lender qualifies the loan based mostly on the property’s rent and value instead of personal income.If I pulled out around $200K (roughly 70% of what the home’s worth), the monthly payment for principal and interest might fall in the $1,400–$1,500 range.Once I add property taxes and insurance, the total monthly cost would probably be close to $1,700.Since the property currently rents for about $1,800 a month total, it would basically break even or maybe make a small positive.That seems to qualify under the DSCR rules I’ve read about, but I’m not sure if that’s too thin to be worth the risk — especially with rates where they are right now.If this type of loan actually works the way I think it does, it could free up roughly $200K in cash that I could use as down payments or rehab funds to buy additional rentals.I just don’t know if that’s a smart move, or if I’m misunderstanding how flexible these loans really are.What I’m Trying to Figure OutDoes this make sense in today’s market, or would you hold the equity and wait for rates to drop?
28 November 2025 | 4 replies
Quote from @William Thompson: One thing I’ve noticed working with a lot of investors is this:People spend a ton of time researching markets, strategies, and financing…but almost no time building the habits that actually keep their portfolio healthy long-term.Here’s the simple truth:Your systems will make or break your growth.Not the market.Not the deal.Not even the interest rate.I’ve seen investors with average deals but great systems outperform people buying in the best markets with none.Things like:Keeping clean booksTracking expenses in real timeReviewing your numbers monthlyHaving a game plan before tax seasonThese aren’t exciting, but they’re the difference between “I think I made money” and “I know exactly what’s working.”Real estate is more forgiving than most businesses… but eventually, disorganization catches up.The investors who last are the ones who treat it like a business early — even when they only own one door.What’s one system or habit that’s helped you stay organized as your portfolio grows?
18 November 2025 | 6 replies
Same fees as just about anywhere - free refi within 3 years (a lot of places actually offer this if you ask them) but overall that was probably the fastest easiest conventional loan I have done to date.
18 November 2025 | 5 replies
With the right info, it can actually be one of the more stable setups you can inherit.Here’s how I’d approach this if I were in your shoes:1.
4 November 2025 | 19 replies
I’ve actually seen out-of-state BRRRRs work well over the last couple years, but only for investors who treat it like a business, not a side project.The key has been building a local operations system (property manager, contractor, and boots-on-the-ground contact) before ever closing.
21 November 2025 | 9 replies
Excel is perfect for your first project.You don’t need fancy software yet, a clean sheet that tracks:• Budget vs actual• Invoices/receipts• Category (materials, labor, holding costs, etc.)• What’s capitalized vs expensed• What’s part of unamortized loan costsOnce you set it up, staying organized becomes way easier.2.