20 December 2024 | 1 reply
Can you suggest an insurance company and contacts for our rental houses?

26 December 2024 | 18 replies
@Michael Baum Thank you everyone for the suggestions/opinions.

13 December 2024 | 7 replies
Here's an article with additional FAQs on cost segregation studies that you may find helpful and should answer some of your questions above.

21 December 2024 | 7 replies
And I would suggest that links and QR codes may be helpful to some guests but a certain number won’t use that type of technology so I’d include hard copies of menus.

15 December 2024 | 4 replies
My vision includes developing the land into a destination with features like driveways, walking paths, utilities, and unique lodging structures.Here’s my tentative plan1.Place the existing STR in an LLC2.Apply for an SBA small business loan to fund the next steps, including a feasibility study (~$10k+), land clearing, and infrastructure development.While this direction excites me, I’m torn between pursuing this venture and continuing with a more traditional approach—buying one home per year using conventional loans.I’d love to hear your thoughts:•Has anyone transitioned from STRs to glamping or similar ventures?

22 December 2024 | 7 replies
Anyone could suggest any tips, resources, or builders/contractors they had worked with?

18 December 2024 | 11 replies
The solution I give them is to narrow their focus on a specific market, study it, and get to know what a good deal looks like.

16 December 2024 | 6 replies
@Richard Benjamin Wilhite, @Bill B.makes some good points about loan terms and the strict identification rules for a 1031 exchange.I would add from a tax mitigation perspective that buying the largest property possible will give you the greatest amount of cost segregation possibility and at the lowest cost since it would be one study rather than several.

22 December 2024 | 24 replies
Are you suggesting this wasn’t a result of pent-up demand but rather due to some other factor?

17 December 2024 | 16 replies
3 recent national studies show that the rent to value ratio is at an all time worse (what they really studied was cheaper to rent than buy, but there is strong correlation).