2 May 2024 | 41 replies
To what I understand from doing government contracts and basic law, and this could go in the grey area; if you hire somebody today, end the job tomorrow, give him another set of job next week and end 2 days after, then another set will go a month from today, that would basically tell these entities that you are evading the basic taxes, unlicensed contractor law, the whole nine yards.
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1 May 2024 | 3 replies
If they do find out you can always deed it back to the original entity to avoid the due on sale.Make sure you make sure the insurance has the original entity/owner on the policy as the policyholder or additional insured so that doesn't trigger the due on sale when sent to the lender
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1 May 2024 | 26 replies
If you accept, the entity that you are requesting information from has 30 days to comply and fulfill your request from the date all monies are paid and you have answered any/all questions they have about your request.If they deny your request, you are more than welcome to submit a modified request.
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2 May 2024 | 12 replies
Even though the ONLY way that a tax sale can be reversed is if the entity or person that lost the property can prove that the tax collector missed the statutory public notification laws.. ( ask me how i know this one LOL )..
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1 May 2024 | 4 replies
California does not recognize series LLCs.You also want to look at whether a pass-through entity helps your bottom line and your taxes.
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1 May 2024 | 3 replies
Hey James - It depends on whether the property is in your name or titled to an entity - many lenders that offer HELOCs on investments don't allow entities, which is a problem for some investors.
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1 May 2024 | 8 replies
If buying as an investment and not planning to live there, different story.As far as taking out a LOC I would make sure you take it out in the LLC or entity you plan to use to purchase the property with so you have some business credit seasoning under your belt.
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2 May 2024 | 8 replies
Real estate funds are a mutual investment entity.
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1 May 2024 | 1 reply
Each owner of the entity with a 20% or more interest must complete this application, but you can do it separately.
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1 May 2024 | 10 replies
There is reg cf and reg a which are two very different types of entities and goals since you can only raise $5M and the other $75What concerns me when I look at reg cf stuff is after all the fees they pay, where is the meat on the bone for investors?