We intentionally manage a small number of single family homes, duplexes, and
quadplexes in the Charleston area.
I recently bought
a quadplex in Kingsland and will be moving to the area shortly.
I was just quoted $ 1,800 for a 2,800 sq. ft.
quadplex in Central Florida.
I am currently living in Japan and have property managers for
a quadplex in the Atlanta area.
Not exact matches
I want my first property to hopefully be a
quadplex house hack somewhere
in Fort Worth, and then build my way up to large apartment buildings.
I am purchasing my first Multi-family
quadplex built
in 1984 with a partner.
I found a
quadplex that I am interested
in acquiring.
I'm interested
in the second option (buying a small multi-family) however, after seeing my first purchase fell out of escrow (bc my employer reduced my hours from a full time to a part time) i'm scrambling to figure out what needs to be done to get a house (esp a
quadplex).
Hello Bp We recently acquired a
quadplex and
in the closing table, came to know that the seller filed for eviction on one of the tenant as she default the rent payment.
So, when rates are low, you can lock
in a
quadplex for 30 years and know that you are protected from interest rates going up
in the future.
That being said, I have always wanted to start investing
in real estate preferable tri-plex and
quadplexes.
I don't know what your options are
in your location but maybe build a much smaller place, buy a much smaller place, or buy a duplex /
quadplex and house hack.
That's because the Duplex, Triplex, and
Quadplex properties are similar enough to Single Family properties that nearly all our investors who've had success
in one can succeed
in the other.
The duplex / triplex /
quadplex market is indeed quite competitive at this point (March 2018) I'm helping a friend look for deals on MLS for that same property type and the last «good» deal we liked had 12 showings
in 2 days with 6 - 7 offers.