
6 October 2025 | 56 replies
I do not believe I am RentRedi's target consumer as I have more needs than others and that has been true for other business relationships I tried to build in my time, but I hate when things have to end on sour notes and the fact that it took publicly criticizing the service to get attention is more than disappointing on RentRedi's part as a service business.

6 October 2025 | 19 replies
I explained I do not do cash for keys and that I will do everything I can to collect what is owed and make sure the eviction is public making it hard for them to get another quality unit (in my market if you have an eviction you will only be able to rent slumlord units).

6 October 2025 | 25 replies
Most renters lack credit and/or steady income history and/or down payment monies.Everyone - TLDR let me know if you want info for a 3/29/2022 4pm EDT webinar on no-score mortgages that I'm helping to publicize, it could help your renters buy you out!

24 September 2025 | 25 replies
I think the latter becomes difficult as those dates typically aren't readily available via public domain.

24 September 2025 | 18 replies
Also, here's a great article that describes the REPS status:https://www.aicpa-cima.com/resources/article/tax-rules-for-r...And another for the passive activity loss limitation that other mentioned:https://www.irs.gov/publications/p925

3 September 2025 | 5 replies
distance of public transportation.

6 October 2025 | 458 replies
Here’s some suggestions for investors investing in non publicly traded securities1.

5 September 2025 | 1 reply
@Sam McCormack, I don’t have personal experience with Kaleb Washington, but I’d recommend checking local RE investor groups, Facebook/LinkedIn, or public records for recent assignments to see if his deals are documented.

18 September 2025 | 6 replies
When evaluating the deal, push for details on occupancy, lot rent, utility setup (public vs private), park-owned vs tenant-owned homes, expenses (including deferred maintenance), and any zoning or legal compliance issues.

5 September 2025 | 0 replies
Unlike a traditional rental license, creating a shared housing facility requires city council approval and opens the project up to a public comment period, which means that you basically need to get neighborhood buy-in to operate the property.