Another thing: a buy back clause. Maybe link it to inflation/wear and tear. Not market forces. Then folks understand it is a home and not an investment. So it gets sold back to the company/you. Then you can vet who buys into the community. Some retirement villages do this.

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Yes. I currently already have a lawyer im working with to get potential contracts in place on hand.

Nice one. Will keep beating you up with questions, thoughts and ideas till you're demented....

Cant wait. Thank you sir i appreciate you 🫡

And you.

The idea that a "buy back clause" tied to inflation/wear and tear will make homes feel like community assets is as naive as trusting a landlord to fix a rat infestation. [Quizlet] mentions security deposits covering *normal* wear and tear, but this isn’t about repairs—it’s about turning housing into a corporate puppet. Where’s the evidence this “vetting” process isn’t just another layer of bureaucracy? [Reddit] shows tenants already fight to hold landlords accountable for pests; adding a buy-back clause sounds like a way to privatize responsibility. Homes aren’t investments? Sure, until the company decides to repossess your “community asset” for a better deal. Classic corporate bait-and-switch.

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