
16 January 2025 | 2 replies
You have used home equity lines of credit to purchase investment rentals and want to know the best way to pay down the HELOCs.Between the two properties you bought, after expenses, you have $250 a month positive cashflow to use.What I like to do is pay down some principal every month with my positive cashflow.I use my extra active income from real estate commissions helping other investors to pay down the principal even more which just frees up that credit for me to use again.I know I can refinance the HELOC debt before it changes to principal and interest as it is just interest only payments as yours are.One difference is the cashflow, I have greater positive cashflow and could make the principal and interest payment in the future with the extra cashflow I already enjoy.I always get HELOCs on my income properties as well after purchasing them to pull out as much of my downpayment as possible.

17 January 2025 | 21 replies
Fairlawn is a bit more expensive and there's really low inventory in that area but Cuyahoga Falls is also a nicer suburb in Akron that does really good with rentals.

15 January 2025 | 11 replies
All original tenants were long term low rent tenants.

20 January 2025 | 3 replies
A 1031 exchange doesn’t apply, but funding through a self-directed IRA can defer taxes, though profits from debt financing may trigger UBIT.To reduce taxes, consider forming an LLC for better expense deductions, offsetting gains with investment losses, or holding the property for 12+ months to qualify for lower long-term capital gains rates.This post does not create a CPA-Client relationship.

19 January 2025 | 269 replies
So far, we’ve been looking at Ericeira, Azeitao, Sesimbra and downtown Lisbon but those areas are saturated and are expensive.

19 January 2025 | 18 replies
I've included an example below to help illustrate this.So different lenders have different rates (which do vary even for DSCR loans) but these are factors they all consider.See example below:DSCR < 1Principal + Interest = $1,700Taxes = $350, Insurance = $100, Association Dues = $50Total PITIA = $2200Rent = $2000DSCR = Rent/PITIA = 2000/2200 = 0.91Since the DSCR is 0.91, we know the expenses are greater than the income of the property.DSCR >1Principal + Interest = $1,500Taxes = $250, Insurance = $100, Association Dues = $25Total PITIA = $1875 Rent = $2300DSCR = Rent/PITIA = 2300/1875 = 1.23If a purchase, you also generally need reserves / savings to show you have 3-6 month payments of PITIA (principal / interest (mortgage payment), property taxes and insurance and HOA (if applicable).

18 January 2025 | 1 reply
I'm new to investing in rental properties and I live in one of the most expensive markets in CA.
8 February 2025 | 89 replies
We mix it up with performing and non performing loans and we have some performing that are short term bridge loans as my confidence in reperforming paper is low based on the re default rate risk.One last thing to touch on, there was a comment that I am one of Marco’s henchman.

9 January 2025 | 4 replies
For example you are putting in low grade laminate and all other listings are putting in high grade vinyl.

1 February 2025 | 51 replies
Hard to give up such a low mortgage rate, but in the end that's small potatoes compared to potential OOS problems.