13 November 2025 | 3 replies
To an extend, it is a 2-sides of the tracks city, with one side having your Chick-Fila and Lowe's and the other side having many boarded up homes in a row on certain streets.
10 November 2025 | 0 replies
MTRs are a sweet spot between long-term and short-term — but some hosts forget there are still rules.Check your city’s definition of “short-term.”
12 November 2025 | 3 replies
Hi Justin, I do real estate and work with a lot of investors in the Kansas City metro, but I grew up in an own three single-family residence that I long-term rent in Columbia.
9 November 2025 | 26 replies
Possibly, but not the desirable areas where you can commute easily into the city.
14 November 2025 | 10 replies
Louis - Rent: $1,295, DOM: 59, MoM DOM: 9%, YoY DOM: 22% MontanaAll - Rent: $1,950, DOM: 50, MoM DOM: 28%, YoY DOM: 39% NebraskaAll - Rent: $1,400, DOM: 40, MoM DOM: 3%, YoY DOM: -9% NevadaLas Vegas - Rent: $1,995, DOM: 48, MoM DOM: 12%, YoY DOM: 17% New HampshireAll - Rent: $2,195, DOM: 66, MoM DOM: 8%, YoY DOM: -16% New JerseyNewark - Rent: $2,100, DOM: 62, MoM DOM: 22%, YoY DOM: 82% New MexicoAll - Rent: $1,750, DOM: 66, MoM DOM: 47%, YoY DOM: 61% New YorkNew York - Rent: $3,700, DOM: 63, MoM DOM: 12%, YoY DOM: 22% North CarolinaCharlotte - Rent: $1,973, DOM: 55, MoM DOM: 10%, YoY DOM: -2% Raleigh - Rent: $1,845, DOM: 59, MoM DOM: 4%, YoY DOM: -11% North DakotaAll - Rent: $1,100, DOM: 64, MoM DOM: 3%, YoY DOM: -10% OhioCincinnati - Rent: $1,400, DOM: 58, MoM DOM: 10%, YoY DOM: 35% Cleveland - Rent: $1,200, DOM: 71, MoM DOM: 8%, YoY DOM: 39% Columbus - Rent: $1,500, DOM: 66, MoM DOM: 11%, YoY DOM: 20% OklahomaOklahoma City - Rent: $1,450, DOM: 49, MoM DOM: 14%, YoY DOM: 17% OregonPortland - Rent: $1,795, DOM: 51, MoM DOM: 21%, YoY DOM: 34% PennsylvaniaPhiladelphia - Rent: $1,600, DOM: 67, MoM DOM: 12%, YoY DOM: 24% Pittsburg - Rent: $1,500, DOM: 69, MoM DOM: 8%, YoY DOM: 30% Rhode IslandProvidence - Rent: $2,195, DOM: 56, MoM DOM: 19%, YoY DOM: 31% South CarolinaAll - Rent: $1,825, DOM: 61, MoM DOM: 13%, YoY DOM: 27% South DakotaAll - Rent: $1,250, DOM: 51, MoM DOM: 16%, YoY DOM: 28% TennesseeNashville - Rent: $2,240, DOM: 54, MoM DOM: 8%, YoY DOM: 11% TexasAustin - Rent: $1,995, DOM: 64, MoM DOM: 12%, YoY DOM: 8% Dallas - Rent: $1,975, DOM: 87, MoM DOM: 7%, YoY DOM: 28% Houston - Rent: $1,900, DOM: 58, MoM DOM: 5%, YoY DOM: 16% San Antonio - Rent: $1,650, DOM: 67, MoM DOM: 8%, YoY DOM: 22% UtahSalt Lake City - Rent: $1,550, DOM: 44, MoM DOM: 5%, YoY DOM: 16% VermontAll - Rent: $2,400, DOM: 64, MoM DOM: 10%, YoY DOM: 7% VirginiaRichmond - Rent: $1,650, DOM: 57, MoM DOM: 39%, YoY DOM: 43% WashingtonSeattle - Rent: $2,200, DOM: 50, MoM DOM: 19%, YoY DOM: 25% Washington DCWashington DC - Rent: $2,500, DOM: 63, MoM DOM: 7%, YoY DOM: 17% West VirginiaAll - Rent: $1,200, DOM: 53, MoM DOM: 6%, YoY DOM: 10% WisconsinMilwaukee - Rent: $1,295, DOM: 48, MoM DOM: 2%, YoY DOM: 22% WyomingCheyenne - Rent: $1,395, DOM: 29, MoM DOM: 29%, YoY DOM: -22%Data source: Zillow This is good content that you posted.
14 November 2025 | 0 replies
Futures pricing reflects a cautious bias, with markets assigning higher odds to a pause rather than a hike, but without fresh data, confidence in these projections remains fragile.https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/irs-reveals-updated-retirement-contribution-limits-2026Addison, Allen, Anna, Azle, Batch Springs, Bedford, Benbrook, Burleson, Cedar Hill, Celina, Cleburne, Colleyville, Coppell, Corinth, Crowley, DeSoto, Duncanville, Ennis, Euless, Farmers Branch, Fate, Flower Mound, Forest Hill, Forney, Glenn Heights, Grapevine, Greenville, Haltom City, Highland Village, Hurst, Keller, Lancaster, Little Elm, Mansfield, Midlothian, Mineral Wells, Murphy, North Richland Hills, Prosper, Red Oak, Rockwall, Rowlett, Royse City, Sachse, Saginaw, Seagoville, Southlake, Terrell, The Colony, Trophy Club, University Park, Watauga, Waxahachie, Weatherford, White Settlement, Wylie, Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Irving, Garland, Grand Prairie, McKinney, Frisco, Mesquite, Carrollton, Denton, Richardson, Lewisville, or Arlington
17 November 2025 | 12 replies
I suspect many cities across the country are seeing similar conditions where the perfect storm of favorable zoning and cheap financing led to more units than the market could absorb.
12 November 2025 | 6 replies
Charlotte > Houston and PhiladelphiaA lot of fortune 500 companies are building new offices in Charlotte.Weather is greatThe state tax rate is decreasing(and overall considered low)The city has a high end airportCharlotte, in my opinion, has the opportunity to be a large city(maybe not on the level of NYC, LA, San Francisco) but just a level below.
9 November 2025 | 21 replies
ADRs are also compressing it seems from the data.Which cities are best to deal with when it comes to STR rules and regulations?
11 November 2025 | 0 replies
Addison, Allen, Anna, Azle, Batch Springs, Bedford, Benbrook, Burleson, Cedar Hill, Celina, Cleburne, Colleyville, Coppell, Corinth, Crowley, DeSoto, Duncanville, Ennis, Euless, Farmers Branch, Fate, Flower Mound, Forest Hill, Forney, Glenn Heights, Grapevine, Greenville, Haltom City, Highland Village, Hurst, Keller, Lancaster, Little Elm, Mansfield, Midlothian, Mineral Wells, Murphy, North Richland Hills, Prosper, Red Oak, Rockwall, Rowlett, Royse City, Sachse, Saginaw, Seagoville, Southlake, Terrell, The Colony, Trophy Club, University Park, Watauga, Waxahachie, Weatherford, White Settlement, Wylie, Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, Irving, Garland, Grand Prairie, McKinney, Frisco, Mesquite, Carrollton, Denton, Richardson, Lewisville, or Arlington