
15 January 2025 | 9 replies
Take time to learn through military-focused resources like Military House Hacking or Active Duty Passive Income, and connect with other military investors online or on base.

13 January 2025 | 3 replies
That does not require employment or job seasoning instead it uses the rents to qualify and you can take out up to 80% LTV cash.Use the cash to put down on the next 1-2 or more properties as long as the other properties are debt servicing themselves it opens up more opportuities to buy more future assets and increase your passice income.

10 January 2025 | 4 replies
Personally I never listen to what the seller states the income is as they are sometimes way off.

9 January 2025 | 2 replies
Sterling,Each lender is different on how they calculate income and also what overlays they have that can cause a bad income calc.

9 January 2025 | 13 replies
I also agree, that income is not a protected class.

13 January 2025 | 2 replies
He is very good about deductions on tax returns so his income looks negligible and of course banks wont talk to him about loans.

11 January 2025 | 420 replies
[So much income, but so few ideas as to what to do with it?]

11 January 2025 | 4 replies
There’s huge retal income potential if you nail that balance between improvements that wow tenants and improvements that merely look fancy but don’t justify higher rents.I’d also keep an eye on how your high end plan fits the local demand.

10 January 2025 | 14 replies
Refi after construction.These numbers consider only the portion of costs of the HEL attributable to the land purchase, not the payoff of the HELOC (which we took out to buy the Seaside condo).Cash In: $66,166 (Cash, 1 year of debt service of HEL, debt service of const. loan, furnishing)Amount Financed: $548,000 (home equity loan + construction loan + closing costs)Total Cost of build: $614,166ARV: $850,000 (or rather "after construction value")Refi $637,500 (75% of value + closing costs) Cash Out $89,500New payment $4500/month (54,000/year)Estimated Cash Flow (pre-tax numbers, so actual mileage may vary)airBNB year 1: $70,000 (net income $16,000)airBNB year 2: $100,000 (net income $46,000)airBNB year3+: $120,000 (net income $66,000)ROI (construction year): 0ROI Year 1 of STR: 24.2% ROI Year 2 of STR: 69.5% ROI Year 3+ of STR: 99.7% Did I calculate these ROI numbers right?

14 January 2025 | 19 replies
My goal, over the next five years, is to utilize real estate in lieu of my current hourly consulting income, by building a portfolio of rentals.