
17 June 2025 | 18 replies
The short version: Class A (nice suburb with great schools) owned since 2013 is doing well except I have significant property tax increases, Class C I would never ever buy again - projected cash flow on paper (with 6.99% interest rate on my mortgage) but in reality I'm -$300 to-$500 a month from repair calls and the costs from property management.As far as house hacking, I do know someone who bought a home with a $150k salary (which isn't high by Bay Area standards), lives in the 400sq ft ADU and rents out both levels of the SFH on AirBnb.

17 May 2025 | 5 replies
would you be open to testing a beta version of the agent that I am building?

20 May 2025 | 11 replies
I'd love to do a CSV type import but that's only possible on the accounting version, which I don't have.

16 June 2025 | 180 replies
Short version is; the vast majority of people have no comprehension of nor do they want to fully know or comprehend all of the details.

17 May 2025 | 38 replies
Companies tend to do well when they professionally respond to negative posts, and either provide their version of events and stand their ground, or do what it takes to turn the angry poster into an ally.

28 May 2025 | 15 replies
. $300k per year (which I do not find likely at all, keep in mind you're relying on the financial projections of the same people who bought the building without plans or finances in place to get it open and operating -- put another way you're working from the revised version of the offeror's failed projections) you get back $1.2M on your $1M.

12 May 2025 | 8 replies
Looks like watered down version of CA 1482.

16 June 2025 | 310 replies
Let me know if you were unable to download and I can email you a version in different format.

5 May 2025 | 0 replies
Formatting is off because I used the link online version vs sharing the Word doc.

7 May 2025 | 4 replies
The barment process can be time consuming and expensive, and occasionally results in one of the interested parties actually redeeming the property, meaning that you get your 20% (or more) return, but if that return isn't enough to cover the costs you've incurred during the barment process, you may still end up in the red.Short version, in Georgia, you can wipe out mortgages based on your tax deed, but it doesn't happen at the time you purchase the deed, and it's not automatic.