Selling a wrecked rental property

About three years ago, I bought a apartment in Phoenix, Arizona; I bought the apartment with the intention of renting it.

I got it for a great price because the apartment was quite rundown. I devoted several months to renovations. I nearly gutted the interior, replacing the plumbing, electrical wires as well as drywall. I added insulation, modern light fixtures as well as painted. I invested into brand modern appliances, including a washer, dryer, dishwasher, oven as well as refrigerator, even the water heating system as well as toilers were brand new. I made sure the a/c was in great laboring order as well as upgraded all of the door locks. I even spent some time sprucing up the yard as well as gardens. I carefully vetted the tenant I chose for the house. For about six months, it was a absolutely ideal situation, however they paid their rent on time as well as seemed quite glad residing there. When they initially had some complaints, I made sure to rush over there as well as fix the problem, and however, they were never triumphant. They always wanted something upgraded, improved or fixed. I finally explained that if I kept spending money on the house, I’d need to raise their rent. This made them easily miserable, as well as they quit paying rent. The disagreements escalated from there, as well as I started the eviction process. My renters eventually moved out in the middle of the evening separate from telling me. When I got inside the house, I found everything destroyed. They had broken windows, knocked holes into the walls as well as wrecked the appliances. They even poured stone down the drains. It was a total mess. I couldn’t tolerate the thought of starting over as well as making the repairs. I no longer wanted to own a rental property. I instantaneously contacted a Phoenix currency property buyer, explained the situation as well as secured an offer. By choosing a currency property buyer, I was able to avoid a property inspection, worry over code violations as well as repairs.

 

sell property with tax liens