9 December 2016 | 2 replies
Hello bigger pockets community, I am looking for a property manager to manage a small 12 unit apartment building in North Miami Florida.
11 December 2016 | 13 replies
As Account Closed suggested, you may be able to sub-meter much cheaper than running two lines from the street.Propane is expensive these days, I have heard of people around here (mn) having heat bills of $2k - $3k/winter for a normal size home - that's a LOT of money compared to the average of $600/winter on my properties.
9 December 2016 | 3 replies
Hello everyone, I am a medical sonographer, a new real estate agent, and a recent MBA graduate, looking to learn about and doing real estate investments and property flipping/renovations.
3 January 2017 | 11 replies
I have a friend that is a broker in Miami and would probably be happy to help.
9 December 2016 | 3 replies
I am hoping to learn more about investing in property. It have always been a dream. I am looking to see how to start.-Angele
20 December 2016 | 17 replies
a couple of box fans + 20x20 filters.... run continuously 1-2 days. dump the filters directly into a trash bag. replace and re-run.have the ac/heat ducts (if any) professionally cleaned... you don't want to breath the nasties again....also i would check for cold/humid sections of walls. also crumbly (drywall/plaster) around baseboards. if you have those, (respectfully sorry) you are in for a surprise if you open the walls.....now, what is the source of humidity?
23 April 2018 | 25 replies
After permits ,elect,heating, costs and labor was appx 25k.
12 May 2017 | 10 replies
Hello there to all, I started buying properties 3 years ago. And took a break for two year, but just recently started again and will like some advice from the community.
12 December 2016 | 1 reply
Also if u are familiar with the real estate market in Miami , feel free to drop some knowledge !
20 January 2017 | 70 replies
For your question on the Phoenix marketplace, I would say that all around Arizona has strong market fundamentals for growth with jobs, population, quality of living, education, that it would be hard for us to be significantly impacted, which I think is the opposite of what will happen in larger more expensive cities such as New York, San Francisco, Miami, among others.