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Updated almost 8 years ago on . Most recent reply

Flipping - Taxes
Most Popular Reply

Derek,
Based on a comment you left on one of my blog posts, I think you might be missing something here. Let me provide an example:
- You purchase a house for $50K
- You spend $40K rehabbing it
- You spend $10K on taxes, insurance, utilities, loan costs, etc
- You sell it for $150K, but you only get $140K check at closing because you spend $10K on commissions and closing costs
In this example, you earned $150K (gross income), but spent $50K + $40K + $10K + $10K (total of $110K) on cost of goods sold (in other words, your expenses). So, your "profit" on this deal, pre-tax, is $40K.
On that $40K you will pay taxes, so your profit will be reduced by some amount. Most likely that tax amount will be between 15-50% of the $40K, depending on your entire tax situation, so you can expect to walk, after taxes, with about $20-35K.