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25 April 2024 | 2 replies
Essentially, people could donate money and get tax deductions and then that money could be pooled to buy property, fix it, rent it and pay a manager.I’m assuming it would be similar to a self invested Ira.
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25 April 2024 | 7 replies
And their roof loss settlement is "variable by roof age", not actual replacement cost, nor depreciation adjusted (most insurances will hold the depreciation portion of a claim till the repair is done and only then release the funds).Make sure you compare apples to apples when shopping around, pay attention to what they give you for "free", what deductibles apply and when exactly you can get coverage from the insurance and to what limits.
23 April 2024 | 3 replies
Can our LLC deduct the 1098 mortgage of this loan?
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25 April 2024 | 2 replies
High Income professional over the income bracket that allows you to deduct RE depreciation from W-2/1099 non RE income. 2.
25 April 2024 | 3 replies
His closing costs and outstanding mortgage would be deducted from his proceeds, let's estimate that he walks away with If $175k.
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25 April 2024 | 2 replies
There is a fairly new 20% pass through deduction you may qualify for that could help you, but not everyone qualifies.
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24 April 2024 | 2 replies
Upon the sale of the condominium, the capital gains on Person C's sale would be calculated as follows:A. 33.33% of the sale price minus the original purchase price to account for the interest acquired via quit claim deed on July 7 2015.B. 16.66% of the sale price minus the stepped up fair market value on 11/17/2020 as capital gains for the 16.66% remainder interest acquired on 11/17/2020 from Person A.C. 50% of the sale price minus the stepped up fair market value on 01/17/2023 as capital gains for the 50% remainder interest acquired on 01/17/2023 from Person B.Total Capital gains would be the sum of items 3A, 3B and 3C above minus any allowed deductions, such as the home sale costs (closing, repairs and so on).As an individual owned rental property, upon sale the only way to avoid the capital gains would be to do a 1031 exchange and then hold the new property that is purchased for approximately 3 years before selling it.
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26 April 2024 | 25 replies
Nice thing is the tax deduction for driving jobs nearly covers the revenue, so you won't pay much in taxes on it.
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24 April 2024 | 1 reply
.* [Soon] Buy a condo with that cash, live on it, and pay the loan interest (as if it was my rent), basically making this an interest-only loan, where I can pay the premium whenever I want, deducting the "rent" as I go. * [6-24 months] Whenever I find a job and qualify for a FHA multifamily, get that property (with break-even cashflow most likely), and rent the condo at a cashflow loss for a couple years until rent increases (due to high-interest on underlying debt)* [Almost immediately afterwards] At this point, do a cash-out refinance on the condo to pay back the SBLOC (unsure if this is possible immediately after getting the multifamily loan), and secure a lower rate for the condo itself.I know this strategy sounds like loser, as it bleeds money all around, but my hypothesis is:* Underlying assets should grow more than 8.15% in a given year, and I would not pay short/long-term taxes on stock.
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24 April 2024 | 6 replies
Whatever the City won't adjust off you get to deduct from your taxes anyway, so you're not actually paying the cost of the water usage.5.