
14 July 2025 | 2 replies
Thank youWe have two General Admission, all access passes available for a reduced price of $900 each for a total of $1,800

29 August 2025 | 316 replies
While it is true that many brokers may be uninformed or will attempt to downplay their involvement, your goal is not necessarily to obtain an admission — it’s to create a legally useful paper trail.

14 September 2025 | 391 replies
We base this on the admission by the poster that they have first reviewed the documents AFTER the investment went south.3.

12 September 2025 | 446 replies
It's worth the price of admission, or just deduct $200-500 from what you're ponying up for the peace of mind if 200-500 is really changing how you move.

15 July 2025 | 114 replies
What You’ll WinEveryone who submits 7 completed deal analyses will be entered into a random drawing to win:1-Year BiggerPockets Pro MembershipFree General Admission Ticket to BPCon 2025$100 Gift Card to BP BookstoreThis is your chance to get serious reps analyzing deals, sharpen your investment criteria, and maybe even uncover your next great opportunity.Let’s see what you’ve got.

22 July 2025 | 37 replies
I've posted about this many times so I'll spare you my essay about Class C. - Talk to local investors, someone unbiased, not an agent, wholesaler or anyone trying to sell you something.- Get in touch with property management companies and ask about tenant base and median rents in different neighborhoods- I wouldn't buy any sub $200k Class C property.

13 July 2025 | 9 replies
This is good, but an attorney will guide you on what specific documentation (dates of attempted contact, details of offers, records of late payments, lease clauses) is admissible and most effective in court.

9 July 2025 | 5 replies
You can find this information out by getting a recruitment packet from the school and talking to admissions about who comes and how their programs run.

10 July 2025 | 71 replies
Rather than typing out a 5 page essay on here, could you DM me?

11 June 2025 | 12 replies
You are treated as a "student" trying to gain "admission" to their program.