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Results (10,000+)
Karl Kauper Can anyone confirm if RUBS (water/sewer bill-back) is legal in Euclid, Ohio?
23 October 2025 | 1 reply
Hi everyone,I own a 12-unit apartment building in Euclid, Ohio (fully master-metered for water/sewer).
Eric Girard How do I increase value in a four family
14 November 2025 | 2 replies
Replacing aging water heaters is also smart—it improves reliability and can be a selling point later.
Gp G. 5.3 cu. ft cloth washer broke just after 6 year extended warranty
25 November 2025 | 10 replies
we had a gas hot water heater, big name brand with a six year warranty go out at about 6.5 years.
Luke Tamez Can you buy part of someones RV Park / mobile home
24 November 2025 | 12 replies
For a partial sale you run into issues of surveying, subdividing, easements possibly on road access, sewer, water, gas, fiber, etc.  
Naveen Himthani How does one estimated CapEx and OpEx as a brand new investor?
24 November 2025 | 7 replies
If units have separate heating & hot water heater units, really the only thing you have to plan for is replacing the roof and parking lot.
Erik Estrada Brokers, be careful with Kiavi. They will contact your borrowers.
20 November 2025 | 9 replies
The borrower didn't move forward because the rate increased due to the lower DSCR, and the borrower was receiving less cash out.This property was part of a larger portfolio that my client was considering refinancing, but wanted to test the waters with 1 property first.
Craig Cann Flooring 12mil vs 20 mil
17 November 2025 | 13 replies
Bathrooms in terms of water exposure. 
Michael Carbonare 50 Year Mortgage: Terrible For Homeowners, Great For Lenders
14 November 2025 | 46 replies
"likely to go under water": Why?
Graham Bozarth 1031 Exchange Decision: Duplex to Small Mobile Home Park
8 November 2025 | 2 replies
I’m considering a 1031 exchange and would like feedback from investors who have experience with mobile home parks, particularly smaller, park-owned operations.Current Property (Selling):Duplex purchased in 2021 for approximately $145,000; estimated current value around $210,000\Loan balance: about $90,000Gross rent: $2,400 per monthNOI: approximately $16,000–$18,000 annuallyCash flow after mortgage: around $750–800 per monthLow management requirements and stable tenantsReplacement Property (Under Consideration):Seven-unit mobile home parkAsking price: $395,000Rent: $750 per unit plus $40 for water (total $5,530 per month; $66,360 annually)100% occupied with long-term tenants, several in place four to five yearsAll homes are park-owned, purchased between 2016–2018 with metal roofs and Hardie sidingOwner pays water and sewer (aerobic septic); tenants pay electric and trashMaintenance handled by one individual for $400 per month using personal equipmentGravel road, well maintained; potential to add one or two additional homesMy Pro Forma:Vacancy: 5%Expenses: approximately 40% of effective gross income (includes water, insurance, taxes, maintenance, mowing, etc.)Estimated NOI: $37,800Financing assumption: $255,000 loan at 8% interest, 25-year termAnnual debt service: approximately $23,574Projected cash flow: about $14,250 annually ($1,188 per month)Cap rate: approximately 9.6%Cash-on-cash return: around 10% on $140,000 downDSCR: 1.6 (strong coverage)If the price can be negotiated to the $360,000–$370,000 range, the cash-on-cash return improves to roughly 11–12%.Pros:Consistent, well-maintained units with matching exteriors.
Patrick Knapp Flips are dead ends, smart investors are pivoting to new builds
21 November 2025 | 4 replies
You should have a mentality similar to the properties of water.