20 February 2026 | 9 replies
Prepare visuals, traffic data, anticipate opposition, and identify benefits (e.g., affordable lots, tax revenue). 5.
24 January 2026 | 0 replies
Check out the recent YOY trends from 2024 and 2025 on Single Family Properties in NH. Supply is still relatively low for most of the state. We are only seeing supply in the "northern" counties. That said, supply has s...
22 February 2026 | 11 replies
When I first wanted to get into investing, I used programs like propstream to find local data for properties that matched my needs.
15 February 2026 | 14 replies
Where are you getting this data?
28 February 2026 | 11 replies
Data the applicant enters seems to frequently not be verified and it allows for complete omissions in fields and hides important information such as social security numbers from landlords.
26 February 2026 | 18 replies
I researched Wave, but an advisor told me that if I'm not paying for a product, then my data IS the product---maybe I'm paranoid but security is worth paying for in only my opinion.
15 February 2026 | 7 replies
Hi Ashley,This comes down to process at the AMC level, not just finding a “good appraiser.”The way we handle STR appraisals is before the order is ever placed:When we order the appraisal through one of the AMCs we use, we:Disclose upfront that the subject property is (or will be) a short-term rentalAsk the AMC to assign an appraiser who is familiar with both the local market and STR use in that areaMake sure the appraiser understands the intended use before accepting the assignmentMost appraisers will not put STR income directly on the 1007 rent schedule, even when the data is strong.
9 February 2026 | 7 replies
A $150K note loses 25% yield to servicing.Why buyers bailed:Sub-$250K notes don't pencilCompliance + RESPA headachesDSCR rentals yield 12%+Tax treatment kills reinvestmentActive buyers pivoting:Partial participation (lower costs)Servicing-included dealsCommercial paper (higher coupons)Market data: Buyer pools down 60%.
25 February 2026 | 23 replies
You don't want to organize it, spend many hours maintaining this system, and then months down the road hear from your CPA that they cannot accept your data.
10 February 2026 | 6 replies
For condos at ~$35k each, most CPAs will use a simplified approach (engineering-based percentages, builder cost data, or IRS guidance like the Cost Seg Audit Technique Guide) rather than a full study.