
26 August 2017 | 20 replies
Good question...I wouldn't be trying to verify citizenship,, I would require that they have valid social security number so you can verify their credit.

12 September 2018 | 9 replies
Our daughter attends BYU and her husband is in the process of getting citizenship.

8 June 2022 | 1 reply
Hello BP,I currently reside in Canada and do NOT have US citizenship or a US address.

21 February 2022 | 0 replies
We are a Berlin based married couple (1 with US citizenship, both with German permanent residency) who will invest in the US to buy & hold, and are trying to figure out how to structure our ownership.

21 July 2021 | 9 replies
The US (among very few others) is unique in that it taxes people based on citizenship as well as residence, whereas most other countries tax based on source of income or residence.It would seem to me that assuming he is a US citizen or resident, claiming the US foreign tax credit would be the primary way to solve the double tax issue, as I would generally presume the DR would have rules that would source any income to their jurisdiction and subject it to DR tax for a nonresident (though I'm not familiar with DR tax law), given that the property generating the rental income was in the DR.

2 January 2021 | 3 replies
(A very expensive area, similar to New York, San Francisco or Los Angeles).You are renting out a basement suite and tired of throwing away money.The last hurdle is your wife is in the process of receiving Canadian Citizenship so we cannot move to the U.S. for another year or two.The goal is to build equity and ideally some passive income.How would you utilize the life savings to get the best ROI?
13 January 2021 | 2 replies
Hi,I am a foreign investor from Germany (no US citizenship or greencard or anything like that) and have been buying properties in the US all the way back from 2009 onwards.

8 September 2020 | 0 replies
Im looking to buy property in the US as someone who has a swiss citizenship and a hong kong citizenship and i was wondering what is the easiest way for me to obtain a mortgage to buy an apartment complex for the same requirements as an american.

9 September 2020 | 1 reply
Im looking to buy property in the US as someone who has a swiss citizenship and a hong kong citizenship and i was wondering what is the easiest way for me to obtain a mortgage to buy an apartment complex for the same requirements as an american.

17 April 2023 | 6 replies
I plan to get dual citizenship (U.S. and Mexican) before closing, so I can close purchase under Mexican citizenship (the property is within a few km of the coast, if that matters).