Sentences with phrase «pocket of the property owner»

Any increases in the property's value is going into the pocket of the property owner.

Not exact matches

PACE allows residential and commercial property owners to finance the installation of energy and water efficiency improvements on their homes or businesses without any up - front, out - of - pocket costs.
Etihad city owners as a group make over 30 billion profit a year every year after all their properties, toys and games, for them paying the whole sum is nothing just a loose change in the corner of their pocket or in the back of the armchair
RV insurance protects you, as a recreational vehicle owner, from excessive out of pocket costs in the event of a loss or if you are at fault in an accident that causes bodily injury or property damage.
In addition, if the other driver's car sustains $ 30,000 in property damage, the insurance company will pay $ 25,000 toward the claim, leaving the policy owner to pay the other $ 5,000 out of pocket.
Not only did the property owner's policy deny coverage for toxin remediation resulting from the drug production, but so too would the tenant's renters policy if one had been in force.3 Even though the acts of the tenant caused significant damages, the owner was forced to pay for the remediation and other damages out of pocket.
Nearly $ 9.7 billion of damage was uncovered, and Colorado was the second highest state in losses, with $ 1.702 billion in insured catastrophe losses in 2014, forcing property owners to pay for repairs and rebuilding costs out of pocket.
According to Holly Johnson, a contributor to TheSimpleDollar.com, many beginning landlords and property owners also have to pay for any maintenance or repairs out of pocket in order to ensure that tenants are living in a safe and secure environment.
After a few hours chatting with a half dozen owners and visiting eight properties, Yanoviak gets back on his bike, his pitch letters still hanging from the back pocket of his jeans.
REM: With Quebec's consistently high number of For Sale by Owner properties and increasing consumer pressure to reduce commissions, how do you get more money into the pockets of your agents and your brokers?
Moms and dads now having to take on the role of property manager may not be prepared for the risks even seasoned landlords need to manage frequently; tenants that won't pay rent and refuse to vacate, serial trouble tenants that tie up landlords with appeals, complex collection laws that delay enforcement and a Landlords and Tenant Tribunal favouring tenants over rental property owners because the courts perceive landlords as big business owners with deep pockets
The Brattleboro Area Affordable Housing group figures that if gross rent will recover the out - of - pocket costs in less than five years, an apartment is worth considering, especially if the owners can apply the rent to property taxes and insurance rather than repaying money borrowed for the work.
High - end property owners have tended to make up a larger portion of pocket listings because they have an interest in reducing the buyer foot traffic through their homes for privacy reasons or to cut down on looky - loos who aren't serious about buying.
CAR says that pocket listings or off - MLS listings are not illegal if the listing agent fully discloses the pros and cons to the home seller and follows the rules, but CAR says pocket listings «may not be in the best interest of the property owner — particularly if a client does not know about the benefits of marketing his or her property through the MLS.»
Is there a way to insure that the original owner will not pocket the monthly payment I make leading to foreclosure of the property?
An example of a cash - out refinance arrangement would be a refinancing loan of # 120,000, which will repay the remaining balance of the existing mortgage of # 100,000 and allow the property owner to put in his pocket the remaining # 20,000.
While «not illegal if the listing agent fully discloses the pros and cons to the home seller and follows rules that are designed to protect consumers,» pocket listings «may not be in the best interest of the property owner — particularly if a client does not know about the benefits of marketing his or her property through the MLS,» CAR warns.
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