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19 February 2025 | 6 replies
Hi everyone,I've been interested in investing in Canadian real estate for some time, but the price-to-rental income ratio never quite made sense to me.
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15 February 2025 | 14 replies
Gross rental income divided by 2 (50% op ex ratio) equals net operating income.
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22 February 2025 | 4 replies
DSCR loans won't use your income to underwrite the loan.
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12 February 2025 | 1 reply
.🔥 Why Co-Living & House Hacking Work So Well Together✅ Higher Rental Income Per Unit – Renting by the room typically beats traditional rental rates.✅ Lower Vacancy Risk – Losing one tenant doesn’t mean losing all your cash flow.✅ More Affordable for Renters – Competitive pricing attracts a steady stream of demand.✅ Built-In Community = Lower Turnover – Tenants stay longer when they feel connected.✅ Allows You to House Hack a Single-Family Home – No need to compete for pricey duplexes and triplexes!
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6 February 2025 | 13 replies
Tax deductions / write-offs should be a second concern.There are some rules that you need to follow to treat a short-term rental as 'active'(non passive) income which would allow you to offset it against other forms of income such as rental income / wages.
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15 February 2025 | 6 replies
These are usually lower income areas, and you must understand the quality of tenant you may get.
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20 February 2025 | 19 replies
This rental income may not be included in effective income.
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17 February 2025 | 10 replies
The last 3 years I gave away more than half my taxable income and last year I gave away 4 to 5 times my taxable income which perturbs the scorecard.So for me, I plan to stop when it is no longer fun.
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21 February 2025 | 1 reply
Hi BP Members,I shortlisted one RE property with $350K purchase price and with good long term tenant income ($4400 PM current).
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10 February 2025 | 1 reply
Quote from @Melanie Baldridge: In 2025 the bonus depreciation rate is 40%.This means that if you bought a property for $1M in 2025, did a cost seg study and found $300K in eligible assets that you could depreciate, you could take 40% of that $300K as bonus depreciation to offset your income in the first year.40% of $300K = $120K.You then apply that $120K to the owner’s personal tax rate to find the final amount that they can defer in year 1.If your tax rate is 37%, you can defer $66.6K.This is a big deal even at the 40% bonus depreciation rate this year.It’s a massive benefit