27 December 2025 | 16 replies
A couple will not charge any extra fees EXCEPT $500 "ON BOARDING" fee.
27 January 2026 | 7 replies
For example, they offer a very competitive $60 flat fee and a $500 maintenance spend limit.
22 January 2026 | 23 replies
What services do you provide, and what are your fees?
10 February 2026 | 3 replies
To get it permitted you have to pay for an architect, engineer, permit fees, and possibly open up walls to make sure the correct beams, plumbing, electrical, etc. is present.
2 February 2026 | 4 replies
Most of the formal auction sites I've seen are goofy, and either charge additional fees or profit by shifting traditional seller expenses to buyers.Fair housing laws can make private real estate auctions legally sensitive, but bigger barriers may be financing and disclosure rules.
6 February 2026 | 4 replies
Zillow offers potential tenants the ability to pay one fee and apply to multiple properties in a 30-day window.
28 January 2026 | 18 replies
must pay a fee to cover the bid vetting (one place required $100 another place required $500)8. don't accept coins (a shop owner came with a jug filled with coins, that was the last time they accepted coins) 9. there are over 3,000 counties in US, so there are potential for 3,000 different rules, pretty difficult to write that book to cover all the differences.10.
25 January 2026 | 56 replies
Don't know all the details yet, but I found this link which gives you a better idea of what they do and how they promote. https://seniorlivingsmart.com/...Essentially, you join their network, become a "certified buyer" and promote the "ease of transitioning" out from ones house in a quicker time frame, no realtor fees, etc.
30 January 2026 | 6 replies
The work around tends to be instances where the investor is self-managing the construction or is collecting fees built into the development deals, but this requires fairly large total cost projects.I see you pinned Philadelphia, what neighborhood are you focused on?
1 January 2026 | 23 replies
Deals in my market have been trash lately, but I’m trying to scale the right way without forcing anything.If you were in my position today, would you:(A) keep stacking cash and wait for softer deals,(B) pull equity and buy now, or(C) use your “listing-agent/low-contingency” strategy to grab deals even in a tight market?