
5 February 2025 | 10 replies
All rents you get from this property has to go back into the SDIRA but if you get a 20 year mortgage (that the rent can cover) and can pay the rental off by age 65 you will have turned that $90K into several hundred thousand’s of paid off real estate.

13 February 2025 | 2 replies
That was the right move for us at the time, but let me tell you, boy oh boy does it hurt every time I realize i sold a 3 bed 2.5bath home in dublin schools that I bought for under $200K...its the one that got away and honestly will haunt me forever...or until i go back and get it again...but seriously find a way to keep that thing fo the long term especially with that rate.

5 February 2025 | 18 replies
I submitted an application etc but I am going to finish the rehab to get better terms before resubmitting.The back story is that I am about 90% done rehabbing a home for a rental.

10 February 2025 | 2 replies
Hey Jeff without knowing any details everything is what you are able negotiate. but you have to take in account the years interest rate and purchase price and what kind of cash flow.I will say get a mentor if you’re inexperienced these kind of deals can go left if you really have little knowledge when it comes to structure .

11 February 2025 | 5 replies
A few of my clients are actively doing BRRRRs in Sacramento by going for duplexes, adding ADU's, splitting lots and building another SFH.

6 February 2025 | 5 replies
With the current language of the statute, after you exhaust Sec. 179 and 168(k), you cannot take them "again" in a future year unless that's part of whatever the new tax bill is going to be.

10 February 2025 | 3 replies
I only know a few local realtors/ property managers I’m going to meet with them this week to ask more questions.
10 February 2025 | 8 replies
(you’re going to spend too much on these and it’s risky.)b.

3 February 2025 | 10 replies
Point being if you are leveraged to the hilt with no cash how are you going to make those required repairs etc?

25 February 2025 | 10 replies
I don't know if this can be proven or not, but if the appraisal business is slow, an appraiser might choose to be more strict when checking out houses during FHA appraisals because for the deal to close all the issues cited need to be fixed and they pay the appraiser to go back and reinspect.