
Retirement Community
31 Lovett St, Statesboro, GA, 30458
The Project Has 128 Total Buildings. The Units Consists Of Both Public Housing And Section 8 Apartment Units.
24 East Apartments Has 48 Units Available
Grace Crossing Has 64 Units Available
Little Lotts Creek Apartments Has 72 Units Available
Madison Meadows Apartments Has 120 Units Available
Newport Trace Apartments Has 42 Units Available
Statesboro Summit Has 98 Units Available
Blakewood Apartments Has 29 Units Available
Morris Heights Has 60 Units Available
Statesboro Summit Apartments Has 98 Units Available
BROWN'S HEALTH & REHAB CENTER Has 1 Units Available
HERITAGE INN HEALTH AND REHABILITATION Has 1 Units Available
ICMA Retirement Corporation Has 1 Units Available
WESTWOOD NURSING CENTER Has 1 Units Available
You bought a rental property years ago. The value went up. The mortgage balance went down. The rent is stable, but the property is old, management is annoying, insurance is rising, and the neighborhood no longer fits your strategy. You want to sell and buy something better. Then your CPA shows you the tax bill: capital gains tax, depreciation recapture, state tax, and possible net investment income tax. Suddenly, the profit you thought you had feels much smaller. That is why real estate investors love the 1031 exchange. Used correctly, it can let you sell one investment property, buy another investment property, and defer the tax hit instead of paying it immediately.
You thought subletting your off-campus apartment would be simple. Find someone to take over the room, collect rent, protect your lease, and move on with your life. Then reality arrives. The subtenant stops paying. They damage the room. They ignore your messages. They bring in an unauthorized pet. They refuse to leave. Meanwhile, the landlord still expects full rent from you. That is the part many students and young renters do not understand until it hurts: subletting does not automatically remove your responsibility under the original lease.
If it feels like your upstairs neighbor is moving furniture every night, you’re not imagining it—but the solution isn’t always just filing a complaint. Footstep noise in apartments often comes from structure, not intention, which means your strategy matters as much as your complaint. Before escalating, there are several practical steps that can reduce the impact or even solve the problem.
You bought the house. You paid the down payment. Your name is on the deed. You finally have a piece of the American dream. Then the HOA sends you a warning letter because your trash cans were visible from the street, your curtains are the wrong color, your dog is too heavy, your guest parked overnight, your holiday lights stayed up too long, or your front door paint does not match the approved community palette. Welcome to HOA and condo board living, where ownership can feel surprisingly similar to asking permission.