13 November 2025 | 1 reply
Quote from @Kieran Dowling: I am in need of a Plumber who is reasonable and will give me a reasonable price for a stack replacement in Cincinnati, Ohio, and also install installing fixtures I do not want a big company I got recs, shoot me a message and I can send a couple your way
9 November 2025 | 8 replies
I'm tired of asking them for corrections and want to find a replacement.
6 November 2025 | 8 replies
I'd rather it be gone than be a cheap replacement.
14 November 2025 | 2 replies
Replacing aging water heaters is also smart—it improves reliability and can be a selling point later.
5 November 2025 | 3 replies
Theysaid that our 2 year old roof needs replacing, our one year old HVACis improperly installed, and that our perfectly working septic systemalso needed to be replaced along with lots of other newer items.I guess they wanted to knock the price down $50,000 or maybe a lotmore. ....
11 November 2025 | 4 replies
Replacing older doors (not a super cheap thing).
14 November 2025 | 7 replies
AI is great for routine FAQs, but it can't replace real-time human judgment, especially when something serious hits.
14 November 2025 | 2 replies
You can absolutely finish the downstairs — electrical, insulation, framing, replacing the garage door — as long as it’s still one legal ADU with one kitchen and one address.
30 October 2025 | 3 replies
So far thinking things like:- replacing air filters- testing and replacing batteries in smoke detectors and carbon monoxide alarms- carpet and floor cleaning and/or replacement - assessing for leaks and all working sinks, showers, toilets- wall repairs and painting - appliances are in working order- deep clean- change locks and battery -replace all lightbulbs inside and out- minor repairs- landscaping Anything I am missing?
14 November 2025 | 20 replies
@Maya Jones great follow-up, and it’s definitely a tricky spot when dealing with inherited tenants and changing household dynamics.If someone is already living in the unit and you're trying to verify income as part of requalifying the household or adding or replacing tenants, it's reasonable to screen based on income and ability to pay, just be sure the same process applies to all adults being considered for tenancy, whether or not they have a Social Security number.As long as your rental criteria are applied consistently and you're not selectively enforcing them, you should be on solid ground.