2 January 2026 | 191 replies
“It’s only a small handful of non-investors here repeating a complete fabrication from a known con man on social media.””This thread has become a complete cesspool.”perhaps Ryan is not the best individual for Open Door to be utilizing for public relations
20 December 2025 | 1 reply
Most of my utility providers have a summary or transaction history page.
18 December 2025 | 7 replies
We get most owners when they get tired of handling the tenant interactions.
23 December 2025 | 12 replies
They utilize a cap rate for valuation that is both too low on its face and also understates costs of management and operations2.
22 December 2025 | 9 replies
If he chooses to just sell the property, he might be able to utilize a 121 exclusion, which allows you to take the first $250k ($500k if married) of the profit tax-free.
21 December 2025 | 16 replies
Hi Danielle, if you're looking to dive into the real estate investing world, it would help to utilize some of the real estate tools out there.
18 December 2025 | 2 replies
From a pure usage standpoint, it’s usually not worth adding an entirely new service just for the furnace load.The real issue isn’t power consumption, it’s fair and defensible utility allocation once both units are tenant occupied.In practice, you usually have three realistic options:Landlord-paid furnace electricThe simplest and most common solution is to keep the furnace tied to one panel and make heat an owner-paid utility.
18 December 2025 | 3 replies
From a pure usage standpoint, it’s usually not worth adding an entirely new service just for the furnace load.The real issue isn’t power consumption, it’s fair and defensible utility allocation once both units are tenant occupied.In practice, you usually have three realistic options:Landlord-paid furnace electricThe simplest and most common solution is to keep the furnace tied to one panel and make heat an owner-paid utility.
22 December 2025 | 3 replies
Utilities don’t invest billions ahead of demand unless they’re confident the demand is real.When you step back and look at the fundamentals, Kentucky is stronger than people give it credit for.
17 December 2025 | 5 replies
That means using it for personal expenses or your new primary home wouldn’t give you the same tax benefit.You’ll also want to see how rental income interacts with your current income and understand passive vs. non-passive income to make sure you aren't missing out on any other tax-saving opportunities and to determine whether a short-term or long-term rental makes the most sense.