
25 May 2016 | 26 replies
Be very careful about checkbook control as making a single wrong step can blow up your IRA, make it taxable.

21 May 2016 | 3 replies
If so, this would be taxable, correct?

22 June 2016 | 9 replies
Property Purchase Purchase Price $ 215,000.00 $ 215,000.00 Down Payment % 30.00% 30.00% Down Payment $ 64,500.00 $ 64,500.00 Mortgage Amount $ 150,500.00 $ 150,500.00 Mortgage Interest Rate (annual) 3.500% 4.375% Mortgage Amortization Term (years) 15 30 Mortgage Monthly Payment $1,075.90 $751.42 Property Rental Income Annual Vacancy Rate 0.00% 0.00% Monthly Rent - Unit 1 $ 1,700.00 $ 1,700.00 Monthly Rent - Unit 2 $ - $ - Monthly Rent - Unit 3 $ - $ - Gross Monthly Income $ 1,700.00 $ 1,700.00 Potential Annual Income $ 20,400.00 $ 20,400.00 Less: Vacancy $ - $ - Annual Rental Income $ 20,400.00 $ 20,400.00 Annual Operating Expenses Property Taxes $ 1,662.00 $ 1,662.00 HOA Fees $ 2,496.00 $ 2,496.00 Insurance $ 201.00 $ 201.00 Utilities $ - $ - Leasing & Advertising $ - $ - Property Management $ - $ - Repairs $ - $ - Maintenance $ - $ - Accounting & Legal $ - $ - Total Expenses $ 4,359.00 $ 4,359.00 Monthly Mortgage & Expenses $ 1,439.15 $ 1,114.67 Net Operating Income & Cash Flow Summary Annual Rental Income $ 20,400.00 $ 20,400.00 Less: Annual Operating Expenses $ 4,359.00 $ 4,359.00 Net Operating Income $ 16,041.00 $ 16,041.00 Less: Annual Mortgage Payment $ 12,910.78 $ 9,017.09 Net Income / Cash Flow $ 3,130.22 $ 7,023.91 Net Income / Cash Flow (Monthly) $ 260.85 $ 585.33 Less: Depreciation Expense (1/27.5 of cost) $ (7,818.18) $ (7,818.18) Taxable Net Income (Loss) $ (4,687.96) $ (794.27) Property Metrics & Analysis CAP Rate 7.46% 7.46% Gross Rent Multiplier lower is better 10.54 10.54 Cash on Cash Return (CoC ROI) 4.85% 10.89% Cash Flow Profit Margin 15.34% 34.43% Cashflow / Assets 1.46% 3.27%

15 May 2017 | 29 replies
In return IRS allows you to defer paying taxes on all of the gains until future time, which means that you can grow your investments much faster compared to taxable accounts or your personal investments.

28 September 2016 | 24 replies
That $3,636 will reduce the taxable income the property generated. this means on the free and clear property you have to pay tax on $6,364 where the leveraged property you only pay tax on $3642) Wrapping 2 or more properties into one loan is commonly know as a blanket loan.

5 June 2016 | 14 replies
If you only qualify to write off down to 0, is your taxable income $5000 or can you combine properties together so your taxable income is only $2000?

27 July 2016 | 2 replies
I also thought about considering inclusion of either a new fridge or washer/dryer to add as one time operating costs (1,000 under repairs and maintenance)I wound up getting a taxable income of 950 bucks after things like debt service and depreciation.
24 February 2016 | 2 replies
If you have lived in the unit for 2 out of the five years (and married even better) you may have the ability to avoid a large taxable gain on the sale - thus getting LIQUID and ready to bargain hunt WHEN not IF the Downturn happens.

18 February 2016 | 4 replies
The rest is rental property insurance)So my taxable income is -1527

14 March 2016 | 18 replies
The interest paid back to myself would only benefit my retirement, I can stop giving money to those damn dirty banks, AND, most relevant to this post, I would lower my taxable income to an all time low.