
8 January 2025 | 9 replies
Real estate investing has been a passion of mine for time with my mother also having invested early on where I likely have gotten the love and desire to follow similar foot steps.I have taken last 6 months to educate myself and currently own a single family home as primary residence and would like to expand to multi family properties (2-4 units) for additional stream of income, not to mention potential tax benefits for long-term investing.Based on current living situation, I have a fair amount of equity established in my primary residency along with having enough cash to either pay off house completely or use towards investing in a multi family property.Given that I'm the sole source of income for our household with my wife being the home maker for our two kids under 2, trying to weigh out risks with getting started now or perhaps waiting.

8 January 2025 | 12 replies
As you know its near impossible to find a good cash flowing deal in CA due to sale price, taxes and lack of inventory.Last one I closed on was over off of Germantown Road it was a great 2 unit that needed a little TLC for $160K but passed an inspection and was livable.

4 January 2025 | 14 replies
Done multifamily, SFR, STRs... and finally found the niche that I love the most and believe has the most potential for decades to come.

5 January 2025 | 7 replies
You filed two full year tax cycles and the numbers are similar (no greater variant than 1%) they maybe yes.Generally depreciation is added back as income BUT only the 40% portion you own not all of it.

6 January 2025 | 7 replies
I had constant issues with the local government and the taxes were absurd.

7 January 2025 | 20 replies
Other advice, especially that pertaining to tax benefits, is also highly appreciated!

10 January 2025 | 21 replies
., funding.Two final thoughts, I'm all for being efficient, but you should think about the opportunity cost of tying up your own money in a single rehab, vs. using it to fund another simultaneous deal.

7 January 2025 | 22 replies
Note I strive to minimize cash flow because it gets taxed versus other RE return are easy to defer or avoid the taxes.

9 January 2025 | 116 replies
Rent Per Unit $650 $700 Other Income $750 $800 Less Vacancy $(3,120) $(3,360) Operating Expenses $18,790 $19,809 Repairs $4,000 $4,200 Capital Expenses $2,000 $2,100 Landscaping $1,500 $1,575 Utilities Vacant Units $288 $302 Property Taxes $6,000 $6,300 Insurance $1,500 $1,575 Management $3,002 $3,232 Other $500 $525 Net Operating Income $41,241 $44,831 Financing Expenses $22,224 $22,224 Cashflow $19,017 $22,607 Down Payment $21,000 $21,000 Cash on Cash Return 90.55% 107.65% Keep in mind, this return doesn't even include the principle pay down on the loans.

13 January 2025 | 11 replies
@tom shallcross summarized this well in another post and just inflate your numbers up for a $665k purchase price and $2300/mo per unit for rent.Borrow 80% which is like $3700/mo for Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance.