18 June 2020 | 16 replies
@Navroze Pirza We invest primarily in NBLandlord friendly (for keeping pace with market rents) are: AB NB NL NS QC SKON, BC, PEI, MB all restrict how much a landlord can increase rents
31 July 2019 | 97 replies
I like going slow because I can pace how much stress I have over the "wellbeing" of each rental.
23 February 2020 | 14 replies
Vision of ideal life 1-3-5-10-20-40 years into the future and then backwards engineer how much it costRole play the possibility of you being fired at 10am tomorrow:Be A Good Listener – you are basically pushing your agenda.
2 March 2021 | 4 replies
The main issue is pace of appreciation is likely going to be higher than the pace the tenant buyer can save up.
18 February 2021 | 6 replies
It’s a different pace and people are great there.
24 October 2024 | 55 replies
Billy, i would say, look into Pace Morby's free mentorship.
24 May 2021 | 9 replies
@Jason Dasanjh Ontario is subject to provincial rent control, so rents stagnate (barely keep pace with inflation at best) while expenses increase.
15 April 2020 | 30 replies
Our biggest challenges are 1) tenant friendly (impossible to increase rents to keep pace with market) 2) High price per door 3) Poor rent to price ratio If your approach is to gamble on appreciation, Metro Vancouver may be a fit, but I've found better overall returns elsewhere.
27 May 2022 | 7 replies
Landlords are expected to subsidize the costs of housing as rents don't keep pace with market or with inflation (Ontario claims its 1.2% allowed increase in 2022 is aligned with CPI.... ) Options include moving into the unit yourself, offering cash for keys, applying for a large rent increase through LTB (form L5), or massive renovation (requiring N13).
12 September 2022 | 24 replies
Rents do not keep pace with increases in property values in most jurisdictions.