
27 September 2018 | 30 replies
this is were a local lender will save you the time and aggravation of failed deals.. keep in mind the wholesalers uniformly want 2k non refundable..

28 September 2018 | 77 replies
She was my first and last long term lease, and I use that loosely because I had her out a little over a year later because she was absolutely not worth the aggravation.

28 September 2018 | 13 replies
When the community doesn't want STR's they are going to aggravate you with complaints or attempts to change their CC&R's.

27 September 2018 | 0 replies
The vision of a freshly updated home is so seductive, it's easy to forget that the project will most likely come with aggravating delays and unexpected issues.

11 July 2018 | 17 replies
Whereas a 20-something white person with middle-class parents who goes down to the bar, gets drunk, and gets in a fight might receive an aggravated assault charge he gets 30 days in the local slam for, a 20-something black person raised in poverty is far more like to get a terroristic threats charge, a battery charge, and is then charged with resisting arrest.

25 June 2018 | 40 replies
Down votes for posts that are aggravating, inaccurate, hateful, or just plain stupid.But really, I don't pay a whole lot of attention to votes.

27 June 2018 | 11 replies
This will save you the time and aggravation of having a commercial account (since the utility is not in a living space) with deposits and monthly connection charges, etc.I offer a $10 monthly credit (via addendum) which is more than enough to cover the electrical usage many times over, and my tenants appreciate the transparency and the slight cash flow on their end.Our local utility (Nat.

9 September 2018 | 7 replies
@Samuel Carmichael besides what @Brandon Ingegneri said about looking at absolute dollar amounts to figure out if it's even worth the aggravation, I also agree with @Michinori Kaneko about looking at percentages.Personally I look at percentages first, namely 1) cash on cash return (yearly money back after all expenses including mortgage, divided by all money invested to get it rentable) and 2) debt service coverage ratio (net income after operating expenses but before mortgage payment, divided by the mortgage payment).The first is (obviously) a measure of return, while the second is more of a measure of risk as it tells you how much of a buffer you have between the property's net income and the monthly fixed mortgage payment.After you get a little more experience you'll also start to factor things like replacement reserves into account.

12 September 2018 | 40 replies
Its like the post I saw about home depot paint, if something that minor is going to aggravate me, then being a LL probably isnt for me.
29 July 2018 | 10 replies
If this is the case, you might want to collect additional deposits and/or modify lease language to mitigate your risk and aggravation.