
2 February 2017 | 0 replies
Hello everyone, Question: I have a Delaware Series LLC.

8 February 2017 | 20 replies
And 1031 the money into a Delaware statutory Trust.

7 February 2017 | 7 replies
Probably a net benefit for any areas that choose to de-annex themselves.

6 February 2017 | 2 replies
So fast forward to the past year, I finally found a decent job working field sales for a popular energy and solar panel company which i am proud to be a part of, but at the end of the day it's still a job title where I have supervision, have little to no freedom, and little reward.

10 March 2017 | 1 reply
They required 2 DE LLC's: LLC#1 my husband and I are 50/50 partners and LLC#1 is sole member of LLC#2 which will be the borrower for the loan and it is a disregarded entity.Since the expense has been incurred and we are set with another lender, and since LLC#2 is registered to do business in the states where the rentals are located we would like to use the setup.To date I am a Real Estate Professional, this is what I do full time and my husband holds a job.I believe that there will be no issue taking the loan to LLC#2, changing the deeds when the loan closes from us to the LLC and that income/loss will pass through to LLC#1.I believe that since LLC#1 is a partnership that again we still will continue to report income/loss to our personal return and I can continue to be considered a Real Estate Professional.

13 March 2017 | 13 replies
These are viewed as more "hands off" investments since the tenant is responsible for operating costs, leaving you with less management duties.A DST is a Delaware Statutory Trust.

20 March 2017 | 60 replies
A 'home made' self storage project, small SFR developments (as in less than 5, small stick-built houses), a small solar farm, as well as apartments and a startup commercial project.

14 March 2017 | 21 replies
@Jay Hinrichs hat off to you, I'll have a couple Tessa's in a couple years... solar powered roofs and flying in the skies if my predictions are right.And yeah Account Closed it's not really practical but it was a possible strategy and a way you could theoretical fund multi million dollar projects with a thousand bucks.

16 March 2017 | 9 replies
@Oren H. if the properties are out of state you don't need to form the entity in CA, you can form it in the state where the property is located or in another state such as Delaware if you'd rather.

14 March 2017 | 1 reply
So, I purchased a house in Delaware county that is owner occupied.