5 March 2026 | 18 replies
Be aware however, that the surface CAN be damaged...and the underlying material (usually black) will show through if this happens, so you must exercise SOME care.
12 March 2026 | 5 replies
Investor pays him a draw to buy material and I assume pay the labor doing the work.
3 March 2026 | 41 replies
Just as sponsors made decisions on why to utilize riskier debt structures, LP's made the conscientious decision to invest in syndications knowing the heightened risks.
25 February 2026 | 5 replies
After projected rent from the second unit and accounting for taxes, insurance, maintenance, and utilities (+ 20% downpayment), our estimated net housing cost would be around -$2,500 to -$2,800 per month.While this is affordable for us, it represents a meaningful increase in housing expense and would likely reduce our ability to invest aggressively in equities, which has been a core part of our wealth-building strategy.
10 March 2026 | 28 replies
Tracked every invoice, every change order, every material receipt across all my projects.
21 February 2026 | 6 replies
Landlords or Property managers, Currently how are you ensuring the compliance on rental properties for tenant e.g. utility bill reconciliation etc.?
9 March 2026 | 7 replies
I have been consuming as much education/reading regarding out of state investing as I can as well as literature regarding buying larger buildings (not quite the syndication level) although I have been reading that material as well to digest.
12 March 2026 | 11 replies
The key factors are whether the property qualifies, when it’s placed in service, and whether you materially participate so the losses can offset other income.
11 March 2026 | 5 replies
Hello Everyone, US flippers averaged $72k gross profit in Q4 2025 (down 7% YoY), with rehab costs up 12% from tariffs/labor—lumber +15%, appliances +9%. Inventory at 4.2 mo supply means faster sales but tighter margin...
13 March 2026 | 8 replies
Second thing to share is that my goal is to combine this investment property into a house-hack, wherein I'd live in 1 unit, rent out the rest, and utilize conventional financing to take advantage of lower down payment and reduce my housing expenses by having tenants offset the mortgage.