
20 December 2024 | 0 replies
There are several different types of income in the US tax code.Two main types are “active income” and “passive income".Active income is money you earn from working, such as wages from a W-2 job or income from running a business.Passive income is money you earn from investments like real estate, stocks, or rental income from your RE portfolio where you earn $ without actively working.Normally, you can't use passive losses (like losses from real estate investments) to offset active income like your salary from a W-2 job.That is unless you are an RE Pro.The reality is, that Real Estate Pro status is just a filing status similar to filing married or jointly.And if you are a real estate professional you CAN use passive real estate losses to offset active income from other sources.To qualify as an RE Pro you must:1.

11 January 2025 | 31 replies
On top of that you have idiots who engage in bid wars and pay retail for a house that has never been inspected (and those are the bidders who will cry foul when they discover totally trashed and destroyed house that will require a full gut job to rehab).

18 December 2024 | 45 replies
@Nathan Frost lot to cover, please DM to schedule chat!

23 December 2024 | 12 replies
In our 'day job' business of remodeling we have stayed just a partnership with an LLC.

16 December 2024 | 19 replies
I have some flexibility with scheduling, but you must coordinate with me before November 5th.

20 December 2024 | 4 replies
@Chris Kay beleive you can do DSR loans without a job as they qualify the property, not the borrower.You'd still need 20-25% down though.That's where you have a decision:- Pay down the mortgage, setting yourself up for a future refinance to free up your VA Entitlement.OR- Save up for your next acquisition.Only YOU can make that decision as you have to be comfortable with the increasing debt-load risk and the additional time to manage everything.

22 December 2024 | 2 replies
Job, family, retirement, location, world, moving, etc3.

5 January 2025 | 12 replies
There is no doubt my best return would be to flip after rehab, but then I have a job as a flipper.

24 December 2024 | 9 replies
It's good practice in making the calculations needed to decide whether or not to pull the trigger on a potential deal.You soon learn that starting off as a Doctor is less advantageous than starting off as a Janitor, because the game presets your income and expenses based on the job title.

23 December 2024 | 24 replies
Hard Money will fund 90% of the purchase price and 100% of the rehab on a draw schedule.