
19 July 2025 | 7 replies
It prevents wholesalers and “Re-traders” from taking your property off the market and stealing the time it’s worth the most, the first weeks it’s listed. .

7 July 2025 | 7 replies
I’ve seen cases where the former owner’s attorney files to challenge the foreclosure due to procedural issues, delaying or preventing the issuance of the title.Also, the bank (or whoever ends up with it) might be considering alternative ways to sell, like listing it with an agent or through a private auction.There are many possible scenarios behind a vacant, deteriorating home, but there's one best place to start: Find out who the legal owner is.

25 July 2025 | 15 replies
Does she have a pending legal action that will prevent closing in the time period allowed?

15 July 2025 | 8 replies
Also, determine how you got into credit card debt in the first place and make sure a plan is in place to prevent this from happening again.

30 June 2025 | 33 replies
I don't believe having an S Corp stops you from becoming a "Dealer" or not, but flipping is earned income and taxed as such whether you flip in your own name, an LLC or an S Corp LLC "Doing your flipping and wholesaling activities through a corporation (which is a separate taxable entity from you personally) will prevent you from personally being tagged as a dealer thereby preserving these tax tools for you."

10 July 2025 | 6 replies
This is the problem with doing a "Quit Claim Deed" as you didn't do your due diligence, which could have prevented this.

8 July 2025 | 2 replies
Furthermore there will be a "non compete" clause to prevent the apartment from adding additional in unit connections.

19 July 2025 | 19 replies
Best case just cumbersome, worst case a preventable poor outcome for the client.The issue is that attorneys don't do real estate for a living, it is something they have covered in law school, but that knowledge is about as useless as what you learn when you study for your real estate license and find out that you have passed and don't know the first thing about anything.Your average attorney knows about as much about real estate deals as your primary care doctor knows about dentistry: they learned about it in school and you'd never get a root canal from your primary.I've been an investor long before I got licensed and I know firsthand how hard it is to find a really good agent. 80% are somewhere between useless and dangerous, because they complete between zero and 3 transactions a year and lack experience.

10 July 2025 | 21 replies
Someone who has been troubleshooting 100s of deals knows what to look for and how to prevent/navigate.

18 July 2025 | 22 replies
Georgia is fairly landlord-friendly, but knowing your rights and responsibilities upfront will prevent surprises later.Consider property management (if needed).