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3 January 2025 | 12 replies
You are a high w2 earner, The house is worth 110k today, you are buying from your grandma for 60k in exchange for free rent for life, upside ARV of 200k.The costs of owning the house will help provide tax relief on your high w2 earnings, you are buying a great chunk of equity that will pay off in the future, and you and your grandma are doing each other solids.
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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.
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21 January 2025 | 35 replies
I again state the problem is with the underwriting. 8.5% vacancy, pm 15%, 25% turn over (using my reduced numbers) or 37.5% using your actual, my minimum maint/cap ex would be 50%, prop tax, insurance, missed payment (seeing my vacancy only included the one month turn over), P&I?
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7 February 2025 | 13 replies
It was $9,000 after taxes.
16 December 2024 | 8 replies
It seems that investing in improvements while I still live in the home wouldn't be tax deductible.
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31 December 2024 | 6 replies
I’m talking about getting thorough with expense estimates, factoring in property taxes, insurance, and a cushion for maintenance.
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28 December 2024 | 7 replies
Once you retire the title and place a mobile home on its own lot then our county taxes as real property and we pay property taxes like a stick built home vs a mobile home in a mobile home park which is taxed like a car - vehicle tag.4.
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27 December 2024 | 3 replies
The way I'm looking at it, if my spouse and I only do employer matching for the 10 years we would have more than enough in there and still 10 years out from being able to access it.I do plan on doing 401k loans for deals if the numbers check out, and I've considered rolling over some of our 401ks into roth IRAs to access our contributions but we'd have to pay taxes out of pocket (a big hit to cash flow) and we couldn't touch it for 5 years.
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5 January 2025 | 18 replies
Hi BP.I have a tenant who has NOT paid rent for this month (August), rent is due 1st of every month according to lease agreement.
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11 December 2024 | 6 replies
I am not a tax expert, but here are my thoughts.