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31 January 2025 | 0 replies
Imagine making millions of dollars over the course of your career and then having to pay 30-50% every year to uncle sam instead of compounding that cash over time.This is exactly what real estate professionals have learned to mitigate.To reduce their taxable income, they just buy a building every year, do a cost seg, and use depreciation to reduce their tax liability dramatically.Their personal wealth snowball grows much larger and much faster than their W2 counterparts who give most of their money back to the government each year.Following this strategy as a real estate professional is one of best ways to end up with a much larger net worth at the end of your career.
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5 February 2025 | 10 replies
You would then stress to not incur any improvement cost above $22,000 or you may have to liquidate the property.In this scenariod, $60,000 if you are making an above return at 10% to 12% annually + $30,000 making $4% in a HYSA, the average return is maybe around 8%The blended return would be about 9%You may be better off investing in the stock market, get a slightly lower return but without all the added stress / work.
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20 February 2025 | 10 replies
If I may, a lot of the issues we are running into with insurance is that consumers no longer use insurance as a catastrophic fall back but rather, they nickel and dime on small claims that compund into larger issues.
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16 February 2025 | 71 replies
OZ is worth a look if you need liquidity, but eventually you will have to pay some tax utilizing that option.
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5 February 2025 | 18 replies
Thanks,Harish. this would be typical of a larger commercial transaction.. what you can do is pay the appraiser and the Phase one company direct.. its usually done that way.
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2 February 2025 | 14 replies
--Financing:I would like to do 20% down, or more if needed, but I would like to avoid 100% cash offers as it would likely be the majority of my liquid assets.Question: How does financing differ from the mainland?
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13 February 2025 | 16 replies
Not sure if this appeals to youJoint Ventures: Partnering with a larger hospitality group or another investor might not only bring in funding but also expertise and industry connections. 40% of a deal is better than no deal.
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4 February 2025 | 3 replies
We recently switched all our properties to a commercial policy with larger umbrellas my question is:Do you have your residential properties insured under a Landlord policy or Commercial policy, if so what why did you choose that one?
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6 February 2025 | 3 replies
I've got a private investor though if the right deal presents itself for a larger reno.
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3 February 2025 | 1 reply
Initially we did a light renovation on the rental unit and a larger renovation on the 1st floor.