
22 January 2019 | 17 replies
This will determine the rest of your legal, corporate and tax planning and structure.

9 January 2019 | 2 replies
I do know foreigners can't own land but you can lease it and own the building, or you can form a corporation with 75% Philippine ownership and the corporation can own the land.

8 January 2019 | 0 replies
Our company will also be operating as a relocation real-estate service helping our many large corporation in the Seattle area find housing for their employees relocating to the area which will benefit both the property management and sales division.
10 January 2019 | 9 replies
It can be taxed as a Disregarded Entity, Partnership, C Corp, or S Corp depending on the ownership makeup and election made.You are correct that Canada treats all US LLCs as corporations for Canadian tax purposes.

15 November 2018 | 11 replies
I'm moving forward finishing construction on my 2/2 in Old Colorado City with the back up plan of doing corporate or travelling nurse rentals if STR's are shut down.

9 April 2019 | 5 replies
Otherwise just a normal corporation.

5 September 2018 | 68 replies
Perhaps you can put a mini fridge and microwave in each one, rent each bedroom out long-term as corporate rentals to all the tech heads coming to town to work.

29 August 2018 | 14 replies
I have been thinking of buying a property in Clarksville and marketing it more as a corporate or military rental and if that didn't pan out I would LTR individual rooms to APSU students.

4 September 2018 | 6 replies
Due to this, i am now thinking of buying my first home in another city/state while continuing my corporate career here for a few more years.The obvious issue with this is the type of financing available if its not going to be my primary residence.

31 August 2018 | 6 replies
Will depend on several factors like the type of property, type of tenants, your risk tolerance, other assets you own, your estate planning, laws where the property is located, etc.Any lawsuits would be limited to the assets of the LLC and not your personal assets (assuming you run the LLC appropriately and the corporate veil is not pierced).