
17 April 2024 | 7 replies
Given that you have no income, and it's likely you may not meet the material participation threshold for 2023, the loss would then be kept on form 8582 to be used to offset future years of income from the property in the form of a "carryover loss"

21 April 2024 | 240 replies
The property obviously cash-flowed although not as desired.Kelly ReviewMy experience: Bought: March 2021, $64,900 Sold: April 2024, $48,500 - $5,000 (agent fees/closing fees/etc) = $43,500 Rental income (rents - expenses): $5,600 Average annual returns: 2.9% (approximate) Net loss at sale: $15,800Positives:It was turnkey, but: a.

17 April 2024 | 13 replies
If not, it should have been part of your due diligence to request a loss run report.In any case, if the building is good and your property inspection report is good, and the price is right, just close the deal.

16 April 2024 | 2 replies
RentingFamilyMember is not interetsed in making money, just not paying the food, utilities, etc. of the SiblingRenter.(2) RentingFamilyMember's AGI is too high and Schedule E passive losses are limited.

16 April 2024 | 9 replies
I would like to obtain some land and start growing my own food.

18 April 2024 | 16 replies
Their option was to hold onto it and pay the monthly payment or sell it at a loss and move on.

15 April 2024 | 1 reply
While we do not see income from these properties and are not managing them we do have a significant amount of depreciation and losses that have been assigned to us and carried over from the past couple years.I am invested in some growth/equity focused projects already and am specifically looking in reliable income focused strategies that are tax efficient provided the losses I have from my family.

15 April 2024 | 7 replies
Instead I would like to defer some capital losses into 2023, have 90-100k of AGI in 2022 and take that ST capital loss against LT capital gains I'll have in 2023.

17 April 2024 | 0 replies
This type of financing will typically look very different and more like a traditional commercial real estate loan.That means a DSCR calculated based on a full NOI and expense load (so inclusive of vacancy loss estimates, credit loss estimates, repairs and maintenance, utilities, management fees and more – in addition to the property taxes and insurance expense that are the only expenses factored in on traditional residential style DSCR loan financing).Additionally, the DSCR minimums are generally going to be higher (typically up to 1.25x), the loan to value ratios lower (higher down payments) and underwrite more sophisticated (which makes sense considering the size and scope of the property).Many multifamily investors for properties of this size (such as more than 11 units) can syndicate capital and have more sophisticated financial and entity structures – its definitely a different world once you get up here in unit count.In Conclusion – when you are looking to invest in multifamily real estate and finance your investment – make sure you have the unit count in mind before you start shopping – the unit range can have a huge effect on your options.

17 April 2024 | 6 replies
Buy real estate and wait, don't wait to buy real estate...or, don't buy RE at a loss just to buy RE.