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7 February 2025 | 22 replies
for me, the ones that cashflow the most are the ones that I bought with 3% long term debt, they were new (low maintenance) and they are in high appreciating areas(just a bonus but does not impact cashflow).
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29 January 2025 | 47 replies
If there is no debt service probably 30% is still going of the rent is still going to operating expenses which means that you only made about 480k or so. 480k rents + 800k property is the same 1.3million roughly.
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29 January 2025 | 5 replies
You’ll have 45 days from your sale to identify them and you’ll have to buy enough of them, and only them, within 180 days of your sale to meet your 1.1M requirement, or face taxes.
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23 February 2025 | 0 replies
Instead of chasing distressed sellers who must sell at a deep discount, why not work 𝘄𝗶𝘁𝗵 motivated sellers who simply want debt relief or a solution to their situation?
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23 January 2025 | 23 replies
You could look into forming a C Corp as an alternative way to own this property that could affect your tax returns differently, I am not a CPA or giving tax advise.
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25 January 2025 | 7 replies
The houses would be looking at I'd imagine would be about 7 to 800 k taxes would be about 4K hire a year.
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23 January 2025 | 11 replies
@Daniel MadhavapallilYou should hire a tax professional.
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8 February 2025 | 13 replies
Deduct NEW property taxes after you buyDeduct home insurance costsDeduct maintenance percentage, typically 10%Deduct vacancy+tenant nonperformance percentage(we recommend 5% for Class A, 10% Class B, 20% Class C, good luck with Class D)Deduct whatever dollar/percentage of cashflow you wantNow, what you have left over is the amount for debt service.Enter it into a mortgage calculator, with current interest rate for an investment property, to determine your maximum mortgage amount.Divide the mortgage amount by either 75% or 80%, depending on the required down payment percentage - this is your tentative price to offer.If the property needs repairs, you'll want to deduct 110%-120% of the estimated repairs from this amount.Be sure to also research the ARV and make sure it's 10-20% higher than your tentative purchase price.As long as the ARV checks out, this is the purchase price to offer.It is probably significantly below the asking price.
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4 February 2025 | 2 replies
We were running out of money to continue carrying the property, so we took it.We refinanced all our existing debt into a new 30 yr loan for $2M, which was 10 years IO at 8.375% before going principal + interest in years 11-30.
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1 February 2025 | 56 replies
Tax liens2.