Posts

Boston Condo Fees Poised to Rise, Owner Shock

Image
How Much Are Boston Condo Fees in 2025? Boston condo fees in 2025 are climbing across the market, with the citywide median at $414 per month as of late 2024. Many buyers are already facing higher monthly carrying costs. Typical ranges vary sharply by building type. Standard no-elevator properties often run $250 to $450 monthly. Rising inventory across the region is giving some buyers more room to weigh buyer flexibility against higher ongoing condo costs. A typical two-bedroom in a mid-sized building commonly falls between $450 and $600. Small self-managed associations can be near $200, while luxury high-rises often exceed $1,000. Fees also help fund shared maintenance such as roofs, hallways, elevators, plumbing, and other building-wide systems. Cost Breakdown The cost breakdown usually includes common-area maintenance, water, sewer, master insurance, professional management, staffing, amenities, and reserve contributions. These fees are separate from property taxes and usually excl...

The Simple Formula That Predicts Rental Property Profit

Image
Key Takeaways Calculate true profit by applying a 10% buffer for vacancies and maintenance to your gross rent. Deduct mortgage payments and management fees to determine your actual monthly cash flow. Use data-driven calculations to eliminate uncertainty and ensure long-term financial security in real estate. Master the Math of Real Estate Cash Flow Predict your true profit by subtracting a ten-percent vacancy and maintenance buffer from your gross rent. Next, you'll deduct monthly mortgage payments and management fees to find your actual cash flow. This simple calculation transforms scary data into a clear path toward financial freedom and peace of mind. You'll build a secure future by using hard numbers to guide every single-family or multifamily purchase. Your journey into total mastery of the math continues below. Start With Potential Gross Monthly Rent Many aspiring investors dream of a life where passive income pays for their freedom and fills their future with security. ...

Virginia Real Estate Tax Hike Clears Shenandoah Vote

Image
Shenandoah County’s FY2026 Tax Increase Explained Shenandoah County is moving into FY2026 with a proposed real estate tax increase of 3 cents per $100 of assessed value. The change is tied directly to rising budget demands and higher assessed property values. The fiscal year begins July 1, 2025. Property taxes are determined by assessed value and the rate set by the board. Similar debates elsewhere in Virginia have highlighted how rising property values can increase tax bills even when the tax rate itself changes only modestly. County officials are balancing rising personnel, insurance, equipment, and service costs. Reassessment Pressure and Legal Limits The reassessment impact is central to the proposal. A general reassessment resets values to fair market conditions as of January 1. The reassessment is intended to reflect fair market value rather than serve as an automatic county-wide tax increase. Under Virginia law, post-reassessment real estate tax revenue cannot rise above a 101...

Broke Millionaire Transformation Into Work-Optional Freedom with Chris Miles

Image
Key Takeaways Financial freedom comes from creating income, not just saving money for decades. Turning your brain off financially can quietly destroy your long-term wealth potential. The fastest path to freedom is controlling your money and putting it to work intentionally. United States Real Estate Investor® The REI Agent with Chris Miles https://youtu.be/kBu9GwVVRmY United States Real Estate Investor® Value-rich, The REI Agent podcast takes a holistic approach to life through real estate. Hosted by Mattias Clymer, an agent and investor, alongside his wife Erica Clymer, a licensed therapist, the show features guests who strive to live bold and fulfilled lives through business and real estate investing. You are personally invited to witness inspiring conversations with agents and investors who share their journeys, strategies, and wisdom. Ready to level up and build the life you truly want? Follow and subscribe to The REI Agent  on social ...

This Month in Real Estate Investing April 2026 (Drop. AI Agents. Terror. Abundance!)

Image
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3XwSD-Uf1E United States Real Estate Investor® This Month In Real Estate Investing April 2026 This Month In Real Estate Investing  is the monthly  United States Real Estate Investor show featuring your favorite REI personalities discussing the month’s news, trends, economics, culture, and much more... This Month's News Items Agent Pleads Guilty in $11M Embezzlement Case Downtown LA Market Shift as Tenants Buy Buildings Real Estate Recovery Begins to Take Shape Cybercrime Hits $20.8B, Real Estate Fraud Rises AI Shopping Agents Set to Reshape Retail Antitrust Lawsuit Targets CoStar Data Monopoly Man Arrested in Real Estate Fraud Scheme Gary Keller Warns MLS Leaders Miami Luxury Boom Prices Out Buyers Robot Beats Half-Marathon Record, But Limits Remain The Market Is Talking Loud The latest episode of This Month In Real Estate Investing delivers a fast-moving breakdown of a market that feels unstable, opportunistic, and fu...

Allentown Affordable Apartments Near Finish Line

Image
Average Apartment Rent in Allentown Allentown’s rental market shows a narrow but meaningful pricing range. Overall average monthly rent generally falls between $1,472 and $1,658 across major housing data sources. Reported citywide averages cluster near $1,600. Zillow places average rent at $1,615, while other general estimates land around $1,600. Rentometer data also shows competitive pricing across property types, from studios averaging $1,349 to three-bedrooms near $2,006. That puts Allentown modestly below the national average of $1,641. This reflects local market conditions rather than unusually low housing costs. Studios average about $1,219. One-bedrooms average $1,472, and two-bedrooms reach roughly $1,807. Source variation is notable. Still, most listings fall between $1,001 and $2,000. In broader housing discussions, concerns about gentrification show how affordability can shift quickly even in neighborhoods once seen as lower cost. The largest share of listings sits in the ...