A rookie gets in trouble when he pays a contractor in advance who leaves the job unfinished, and Armando has to step in to set things right. But Armando learns that he too has problems when inspections turn up a host of flaws that need to be addressed.
Angie, Harris, Peter, and Brian attempt to flip an upscale house on Venetian Way. Their contractor is a bit flaky and is finding numerous ways to make more money off of them and raise the budget.
A duplex covered with graffiti in a working-class neighborhood in San Antonio is purchased. A buyer is found, but the deal goes south when the city condemns the building, leaving the team the task of proving it is worth saving.
A dilapidated house overrun by rats and feral cats is so horrifying that contractors refuse to take the job, and an industrial cleaning service has to be hired. But the mounting costs cause tensions to rise.
A home that hasn't been updated since the 1960s is purchased, and the modernization process begins.
The crew at CT Homes decides it's time to flip two multi-family Victorians on Elm Street which they own as rental units. The beautiful homes situated in one of New Haven's historical landmark neighborhoods near Yale should turn a hefty profit, but they need to be improved before they can be sold. It's competition time as Paul and Than square off against JD and Jeremy to see who can do the best flip and make the most profit. The two teams differ in every area, from budget to design. Will JD and Jeremy's motto of "flip it fast and flip it cheap" hold up against the more conservative Paul and Than who believe that more time and more money makes for a better flip?