10 October 2017 | 14 replies
I have a couple of thoughts:1) Ground up - talk to neighbors and gauge what the interest is and if there are enough people interested the get the HOA to call a vote.2) Some HOAs are small little pockets of power and will do only what is in there interests and if one board member refuses you are stuck.
28 April 2020 | 9 replies
There was just a massive development proposed, Singles are going for $150 a foot, etc which is actually more towards A- I would say now or even B+.
12 March 2018 | 9 replies
In some markets with high enough electric rates it could make sense to install solar onsite and sell the generated power to tenants for additional monthly income / NOI
16 April 2018 | 91 replies
And your question has a simple answer, provided by Jay but easily googled, so it was assumed you were not part of a power team with re assets, cash and a stated investment philosophy.
4 January 2018 | 12 replies
The power of knowing value...This Duplex really allowed me to explore looking into the value of a property, putting an offer in, and then adjusting the offer after the inspection.
28 December 2017 | 12 replies
Hi Guys,I'm buying my first investment property in Atlanta and the lender wants me to either give power of attorney to someone or be there in person.
1 January 2018 | 23 replies
HGAR Member BenefitsAutomatic Membership with New York State Association of REALTORS® and the National Association of REALTORS®You have three powerful partners enabling your success.They are going to make you take a new member introduction class that is like 3.5 hours and maybe an ethics class.
26 July 2019 | 22 replies
I am currently investing for cash flow (and always adding value) but will also value invest during the right market conditions and with the right opportunities.Nobody is disputing the fact that appreciation and debt paydown are powerful forces of wealth generation.
19 October 2019 | 9 replies
However, the power is on at this house, or the doorbell still works anyway.
3 August 2021 | 73 replies
So when married couples (or just couples in general) purchase properties together, they are, in essence, cutting their purchasing power in half.