You can learn about rent property for sale at the Zillow website. Alternatively, you can also learn about these properties at the Realtor and Trulia websites.
Yes, the person who lands on your property pays you rent. The amount of rent depends on how many buildings are on your property.
Yes, if the rent arrearage was incurred before the sale.
Monthly rent is payment for using someone else's property.A mortgage payment is payment for a loan you obtained to purchase real property that you own.Monthly rent is payment for using someone else's property.A mortgage payment is payment for a loan you obtained to purchase real property that you own.Monthly rent is payment for using someone else's property.A mortgage payment is payment for a loan you obtained to purchase real property that you own.Monthly rent is payment for using someone else's property.A mortgage payment is payment for a loan you obtained to purchase real property that you own.
A rental agreement can be used to rent tangible property owned by another.
Profit=any money made after expenses Rent=someone pays to use a property you own.
Possibly rental, rented, rent, lease, leased, leasing, borrowed, not yours someone else's, NOT YOUR OWN PROPERTY.
A landlord is generally a person owns property for rent. A tenant is someone who rents property from a landlord.
It is not your property when you have sold it to someone else or when you have not payed your rent or money off. If you have not keep up on your payments you can possibly lose your whole property. :) It is either your property or not your property. It cannot be your property at the same time as not your property.
Yes you will remain liable
If you land on someone's property in Monopoly and they don't notice, you still owe them rent. It is your responsibility to remind them and pay the correct amount.
If it is foreclosed then he does not own it. You cannot rent a property that you do not own.
If the owner loses the house, it becomes somebody else's property...the someone else is often a bank. The new owner can quite legally charge you rent to occupy the property, or boot you out altogether.