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Results (10,000+)
Henry Clark LA Fires Taxes and Insurance
31 January 2025 | 2 replies
Is it like you sold your house and don’t have to pay for the profit?
Jeffrey Milner Buying a share of a large freehold London house at a large discount for first timers
23 January 2025 | 0 replies
My mum currently lives there, she is 80 and not very well, but you would also become a tenant in common and as such if you had the time you could profit 100% from the transaction, as I need cash urgently and am willing to heavily discount the asset.I am wondering if there is a market out there where someone wants to get a foothold in the London market by buying my part of the property.
Tom Nagy Stay away from RAD Diversified
3 February 2025 | 34 replies
I have 3 joint venture deals that were presented to me as netting 170% profits in 2 years. 
Mary Jay Cash flow is a myth? Property does not cash flow till its paid off?
3 February 2025 | 79 replies
This is essential to running these profitably
Nick Henry Appreciation or Cash Flow Focus When Starting Out
3 February 2025 | 32 replies
Take your flip profits in CA, and buy with those profits for CF in the Midwest. 
Sophie Sawyer My experience with Sunrise Capital (Mobile Home Fund)
29 January 2025 | 68 replies
There's nothing honorable about making a smaller profit.
Randee Erickson Blue Gate Capital - are they legitimate?
17 January 2025 | 37 replies
We use an Enterprise CRM System, and are very organized with our files. 
Chris Crawford Selling A House And Giving Previous Owner Proceeds
28 January 2025 | 4 replies
On your tax return you would report the proceeds, subtract costs and proceeds paid to seller, then the remaining profit would be your flat fee.
Melanie Baldridge A post on recapture.
21 January 2025 | 2 replies
When you go to sell, you're subject to tax on the amount of profit between your adjusted basis and sale price, not your purchase vs sale price.Recapture is not repaying the depreciation.
Adam Newman 10% down or 20% down???
23 January 2025 | 10 replies
. $3000 profit, minus about $2300 in mortgage, property taxes and insurance leaves about $700 cashflow, when I move out.