
23 October 2024 | 16 replies
I really appreciate the detailed insights you shared—it gives me a lot to think about.

28 October 2024 | 46 replies
Thanks for so much detail yea I agree!
21 October 2024 | 5 replies
The other person is your investment partner in LLCPartners in LLC pay taxes based on operating agreement and % ownership (each partner gets a Schedule K-1 to report the income from LLC on personal tax return)@Nicholas Dutson more details needed on your property, what it's worth, etc to answer this.

30 October 2024 | 236 replies
If I buy with a financing contingency it is spelled out in detail in the contract.

21 October 2024 | 14 replies
Special features are what set Airbnb apart.

22 October 2024 | 8 replies
Based upon the details you have, there could be potential questions from an UW on the purchase of the quadplex as to why you would be making the change from the current primary to the quadplex and from the brief information you've provided there are could be a lot of reasons why.

25 October 2024 | 26 replies
I think this is the gift and the curse of a still emerging asset class (short term rentals) - as it becomes more "institutional" i.e. more like commercial real estate with more sophisticated buyers then financials and systems for this will likely become more streamlined and stable, but we are still in a place where the buyer pools are more newish investors or typically residential basic investors, so not has experienced or sophisticated evaluating investments based on a detailed financial analysis like more seasoned commercial investors likely would.anyways, just a guess on what might be going on here

23 October 2024 | 11 replies
Hey Chris, Let's connect and discuss this in more detail.

19 October 2024 | 2 replies
It sounds like the podcast you’re looking for might be the one featuring Jeff Thorman from HomeRenovisionDIY.

21 October 2024 | 2 replies
Each state can be a little different so the details matter. https://www.omglawfirm.com/arkansas-probate-intestate-succes...Here is the pertinent excerpt:If you don’t have a Will, the default order of descent goes like this: (1) full blood and adopted children of the decedent, subject to any dower, curtesy, and homestead interest of a spouse; (2) if no full blood or adopted children, then everything to a spouse of greater than three years or half of everything plus dower, curtesy, and homestead to a spouse of less than three years and the other half of everything to other heirs (per this table); (3) to the decedent’s parents or surviving siblings; (4) to the decedent’s grandparents or surviving aunts, uncles, cousins, etc.; (5) to the decedent’s great-grandparents or surviving great aunts, great uncles, etc.; (6) if none of those intermediate descendents are alive the remaining half can go to the spouse of less than three years or to a predeceased spouse’s heirs; (7) finally, if none of these apply, all the property escheats to the county where the decedent died.