
16 April 2024 | 6 replies
Since I am adjacent to the city limit, I can connect with City sewer and water...I was told.I am going back to see if that will let me bypass the 0.5 acre minimum lot size restriction if the new building is connected to city utilities..

17 April 2024 | 18 replies
I think the thing that is being missed here is the Profit First method of allocating revenue to different “buckets” there are banks that do this automatically for you, whereas, with a traditional bank you would manually have to do this.

17 April 2024 | 9 replies
I agree that you both should benefit by not having agents involved and I would even go so far as to go even lower since you are taking on more risk by not going through a traditional sale.

17 April 2024 | 3 replies
I also have about $60,000 in a Traditional IRA that I thought of pulling, but the taxes and penalties might be far to great since I am 44 years old, not 59 1/2, but is still an option.

17 April 2024 | 9 replies
These are more complex legal structures that can provide even more protection than a traditional LLC alone.

17 April 2024 | 3 replies
Her idea at present is going to be to purchase the house herself (using traditional financing - high interest rate) and make the payment affordable for the family's rent to cover by arranging the sale well below market value and putting up a down payment of 30+ % of her own money, resulting in a PITI of ~1500.

17 April 2024 | 9 replies
They may not be able sell their home using traditional on market methods, or even afford to pay off their loan.

17 April 2024 | 6 replies
If you flip to rent you will go more durable on finishings than you would to sell so you want to decide on that, but when you are done, you can see where you are at for sale vs. rent and decide, you would just have to move to traditional loan to carry it if you rent.

16 April 2024 | 1 reply
I have attempted to utilize traditional lenders however they will not loan on an investment property.

17 April 2024 | 18 replies
The videos I watched said that you can finance the property but it’s not the same as a traditional mortgage it’s kind of reverse and with a SDIRA property you need to put down like 50-80% and finance the rest because they’re most concerned with a large cash flow being generated to grow your investment and also to be there in case there’s any major repairs because those also have to come out of the account, you just can’t pay for a new roof for it out of pocket it has to come out of the SDIRA account.