
10 March 2025 | 9 replies
Quote from @Aj Malempati: Hello BPThere is land for sale, before I approach to purchase it, which is a little over 5.5 acres zoned Agriculture, almost all of it is wet land in flood zone with flat topo.

6 March 2025 | 4 replies
From the financing side, condos are difficult to finance as a qualified mortgage, because there are so many variables with the HOA and the fees, especially in Florida since the collapse of the condo in Surfside and the new Condo 3.0 safety laws were passed.

3 March 2025 | 114 replies
Trust when I tell you the house of cards is going to collapse.

6 March 2025 | 17 replies
Your approach here has definitely given me a lot to think about in terms of spotting hidden value.Curious, with the deferred maintenance challenges you faced, was there anything unexpected that came up during the rehab that you’d approach differently next time?

10 March 2025 | 25 replies
It sounds like you have a great strategy in place and a strong foundation with your LLC and creative financing approach.

11 March 2025 | 11 replies
@Jackson Pudlo I have house hacked both ways, during my 20s and 30s in large SFHs and now as I’m approaching 50 I’m in a duplex where I rent one side and have a tenant in the other.

6 March 2025 | 6 replies
However due to limited interest I've dropped the price, and I'm approaching my bottom limit, in which I likely believe it'd be a better financial decision to sell (obviously contingent on the sell price).

11 March 2025 | 9 replies
There are many ways to approach this and they all work as long as you commit 100% to your REI business.

3 March 2025 | 0 replies
However, assumable mortgages provide a unique opportunity to leverage low down payments, low-interest rates, and strong long-term returns—if you know how to approach them correctly.Let’s break down how to structure a great deal using an assumable mortgage, even if it comes with some negative cash flow in the short term.The Three Levers of a Strong InvestmentEvery great real estate investment balances three key levers: 1.

7 March 2025 | 7 replies
Hopefully someone with tax accounting knowledge can jump in here with more detailed analysis, but I looked at this a bit several years ago...1) You still have to pay the depreciation recapture on the sale decreasing the net benefit of this approach due to the large tax payment in the 'sale' year2) The LLC would need to not be a passthrough entity so that it can be taxed separately from you, so you have to add another tax return cost for the years going ahead3) Taxing it separately from you likely means corporate status and corp. taxation rates which are higher than yours and I've heard many times over the years to avoid titling real property as a corp...Overall from what I've seen this only makes sense in a select few scenarios, which for most people aren't in play.