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19 February 2018 | 5 replies
I'm only nearly 5 mos in on my venture but we need to carry the following for our residential care (assisted living) licensed for 41 beds - but we can hold 36 beds in our current configurationGeneral Liability (We buy through an independent broker - basically covers medical malpractice, any slip/falls etc)Workers CompAnd even though you arent interested - Non owned auto insurance in case staff use their own vehicles to run an errand etc, building insurance for wind/hail etc inc general property liabilityAll of this runs around $33k to 36k a year for us - thats before health insurance for us etc - Work Comp is the most expensive part of that mix.Your best bet is likely not to find the coverage by calling yourself - you'll just waste your time - find a broker that can sell you this insurance - as far as limits - some of the limits are state mandated and will be in the regulations.
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20 February 2018 | 9 replies
That would dictate where you should be looking.If you spell out what cash on cash return you are looking to achieve and your price range is, you might get more precise answers from fellow BP members
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19 February 2018 | 3 replies
Things are perhaps different on your side of the 49th, but why would borrowing money to "invest" in private loans be any different (from a tax perspective) than borrowing to "invest" in any other {legal} vehicle (stocks, bonds, real estate)?
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18 February 2018 | 0 replies
When I bought this vehicle I was nothing like that.
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24 February 2018 | 8 replies
I've actually not heard mention of recreational vehicle or boats for STRs yet, so I don't know how much they've thought about it.
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21 March 2021 | 29 replies
Doug McVinua precisely.
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21 February 2018 | 7 replies
@Mark WilliamsThe valuation of commercial asset (which your 24 unit building is) is driven by the NOI of the asset, the building class, the cap rate for that asset class in the area where the building is located and thit is very different from the purchase and sale of residential properties for which the value is determined by the price other people paid for similar properties.it is important to look at the P&L statement for the building you are looking to purchase and verify that it accounts for the expenses and income to work out the true NOI.The NOI divided by the cap rate and divided by the number of units would give you the price you should expect to pay.That price per unit will vary depending on the class of asset it is.Class A commands the highest price per unit and the lowest cap rateClass D commands the lowest price per unit and the highest cap rateNot the precise answer you were expecting but hope it helps.
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1 March 2018 | 13 replies
Even if i did have enough cash to put down for positive cash flow deals, the OC/LA deals would leave such a small cash on cash return that I may as well use a different investment vehicle.
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22 February 2018 | 5 replies
It was a long time ago, 23 years to be precise, since I took my first real estate courses for my license.