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All Forum Posts by: Noah Wright

Noah Wright has started 0 posts and replied 103 times.

Post: FHA vs Conventional with LLC involved

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58

If you're thinking about closing a property under an LLC, there are a lot of advantages that make it worth considering. First and foremost, it protects your personal assets. An LLC creates a legal separation between you and the property, so if something goes wrong—like a lawsuit or debts related to the property—your personal savings, home, and other assets are shielded. Only the LLC’s assets are at risk.

Another big plus is privacy. In many states, an LLC can keep your name off public records, which is great if you prefer to keep your ownership private or avoid being directly associated with the property.

Having an LLC also makes you look more professional. It shows tenants, lenders, and partners that you're serious about your business, which can build trust and credibility. If you’re working with a partner, an LLC makes things easier, too. You can clearly outline who owns what and how decisions will be made, which avoids headaches down the road.

If you're planning for the future, an LLC can help with estate planning. It’s a lot simpler to transfer ownership of an LLC than it is to change the property deed. This can make it easier to pass things down to your heirs or bring in new partners.

An LLC is also great if you're thinking about scaling up and owning more properties. You can set up separate LLCs for each property to keep risks compartmentalized. That way, if something happens with one property, the others are safe. It's also easier to attract investors because they know their risks are limited to what they put into the LLC.

Finally, managing the property becomes simpler under an LLC. You can open a business bank account, sign contracts, and handle expenses under the company's name, keeping everything clean and organized. It also makes negotiating things like insurance rates easier because you’re seen as a business, not just an individual.

Of course, there are pros and also cons, like setup costs, filing fees, and more paperwork to keep up with. But for many investors, the benefits far outweigh the marginal cost differences. An LLC is a smart move for individuals looking to protect themselves, grow their business in a professional light, and operate as a corporation.

Our business-purpose rental loans currently start at 6.25%+, which is lower than conventional or fha - fyi. It sounds like folks in this thread got bad deals and are blaming commercial loans instead of the lender who overcharged them. I'd encourage you to weigh all of your options before making final decisions. All with best regards

Post: FHA vs Conventional with LLC involved

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58

There's a nexus of factors tied to the LLC lending question worth noting.

Typically we use a specific type of private business-purpose note that enables LLC lending.

Other benefits of this note include: No Income Verification, No Credit Reporting, LLC Liability and Privacy protection, Unlimited Number of Loans, Far Less Documentation,... many obvious and non-obvious reasons savvy investors run this route.

These notes are also competitive with FHA/VA/Conventional interest rates; however a 15-20% minimum down payment is required.

Happy to help you cover the bases. Very best regards --

Post: How am I supposed to buy a 2nd house!

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Shawn Callan:

Am I missing something? I'm struggling to see how I can afford to get into a second house with my current DTI. I own a house that I am living in with a VA loan and want to buy a different home and move into that as my primary residence and rent out my first home. But when I quickly run the numbers it doesn't add up. I owe 400K on my current home and would be looking at 450K for a new primary. That's 850K worth of debt. If I could rent my home for $2,500 (I hear lenders could take 75% of that projected income?) plus my monthly W2 income I get $8,675 (2500 X .75 plus 6800). My current monthly mortgage payment plus projected future mortgage payment (2900+2900 = 5800). So I would have debts of $5800 divided by $8,675 gives me a DTI of 67%. I do have money for a down payment, but I fail to see how I could make this work? Is my math wrong or is there another better way to do this? Any thing helps!!


We have private funding without DTI throttles --

Post: Loan type for 4 plex purchase and rehab???

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Marshall Smith:

I have my eye on a 4 plex I'd like to buy, renovate, rent, and hold.

What kind of loans are best for this?

4-Plex details:

-currently occupied

-estimated sale price 265k

-ARV 400k, and 4k/mth in rent

Background on me:

-I have an LLC

-I own 4 single family rentals

-each has around 70k + in equity

-all cash flow well

-credit is 800+ with adequate income.

If yall were me, what loan options are best to buy, rehab, and rent a 4 plex?


Could always buy it on a DSCR loan at like 6.25% and cover the renovation out-of-pocket. Otherwise you're looking at like a 8.99% 12-month bridge loan if you want to fund the construction piece too. LMK

Post: 100% funding for STR purchase and rehab?

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Jon Wheat:

Where do I find an investors to pay for the down payments and rehab costs with a 12 month investment at a 12% return. Nationwide projects being considered.


 Right here

Post: 1031 and BRRRR

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58

Hey Ryan, good question! The short answer is no, you don’t have to pay capital gains taxes on money you take out from a refinance. Here’s why:

When you refinance, the cash you’re pulling out isn’t considered a taxable event—it’s treated as a loan. Since loans aren’t income, they’re not subject to capital gains tax. So, you can absolutely use that money as a down payment for another property without worrying about taxes on it.

That said, there’s one thing to watch out for. If you refinance too soon after your 1031 exchange, the IRS could see it as a way to sidestep the rules and potentially tax it. To be safe, it’s usually a good idea to wait a bit—most people suggest 6–12 months.

Also, keep in mind that lenders will base the amount you can pull out on the appraised value and their loan-to-value limits, so you might not be able to take out the full difference between $2M and $2.5M.

Hope that clears things up! Let me know if you need any more help. Good luck with your deals!

Post: Stock symbol for tracking 30 year rates

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58

Depends what tracker you're using, for example the federal 

MORTGAGE30US

may be available, or

I:US30YMR

Post: PMI cancelation question

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58

Appraisals have to be done at an "arms length" from the bank, meaning the bank can't influence the value. Appraisers are necessarily independent. 

I'd just request the PMI removal, you'll likely have to pay for the appraisal, but if you're confident the value is where it needs to be, great.

Good luck!

Post: Flip Lenders in NJ

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58

Yes that's my cell --

Post: Flip Lenders in NJ

Noah Wright
Lender
Posted
  • USA, Nationwide
  • Posts 115
  • Votes 58
Quote from @Jennifer Katherine De Loughy:
Quote from @Noah Wright:

Happy to help!

When are you free this week to chat?


 Monday around Noon EST if that works for you