28 January 2026 | 6 replies
A lot fewer projects got started the last couple of years, and that’s starting to show up.Jobs still drive housing demand.
25 January 2026 | 3 replies
Hi @Joshua Rodriguez, I haven’t done a flip on my own, but I have invested in flip projects through my club, and from watching the operators and going through the vetting process, I’ve learned a lot about what matters in evaluating deals.
31 January 2026 | 14 replies
Hey Ariel — nice work seeing that project through and being organized enough to keep your LLCs separated.
10 February 2026 | 6 replies
Old post but I figure I would comment here... my Company, Maven Cost Segregation has done studies on projects like this.
28 January 2026 | 7 replies
my model is toggle based either using actual numbers or airdna projections; if it's projections it's predominantly based on revenue rather than ADR X Occupancy Rate, thus the fee deduction should theoretically address the occupancy rate concerns
22 January 2026 | 7 replies
Projects get approved and scrapped all the time.
13 February 2026 | 9 replies
We frequently work with both residential properties, including single-family rentals, multi-family buildings, and short-term rentals like Airbnb properties, as well as commercial projects ranging from office buildings and retail centers to industrial facilities and medical offices.The key requirement is that the property must be used for business or investment purposes rather than as a personal residence.
31 January 2026 | 5 replies
Once you get it permit-ready, you can get a construction loan, but construction loan lenders want to make sure you are qualified and can execute the project competently since construction has things go wrong a lot.
28 January 2026 | 1 reply
That can impact tenant experience and long-term asset condition.From an operations standpoint, financing doesn’t just sit in the background — it influences how aggressively reserves are built, how capital projects are prioritized, and how much flexibility there is when unexpected expenses hit.
3 February 2026 | 10 replies
Dallas–Fort Worth stands out with the most massive investment footprint—well over $30 billion in active and announced projects.