Shannon Vistisen
Purchase the LLC or the property alone
18 January 2025 | 5 replies
Could be the best money you spend on the deal!
Stephen Meyer
This is my situation, what do you recommend?
1 February 2025 | 6 replies
Make sure your wife agrees with this plan, though.
Charles Masten
Expanding to Columbus, Ohio - Looking to Connect!
29 January 2025 | 7 replies
With things like the ONE Linden plan in Linden, which is a 50M plan to improve the neighborhood.
Braeden Warg
What to pull permits on
27 January 2025 | 8 replies
An example is on one permit I had plans for electrical, plans for gas, plans for AC condenser.
Keith Angell
Seeking Advice on Financing Future Rental Property Projects
27 January 2025 | 11 replies
Keep in mind of the I/O(payments/period) and game plan on how fast you'd like to pay it down.
Helena Lee
Has anyone ever experienced buying a house with full bitcoin?
31 January 2025 | 2 replies
A friend of mine from abroad plans to buy a property in CO or FL with a budget of $10 million, but she plans to use Bitcoin to pay for the house.
Greg P.
Small Multi Family Coaches/mentors? 2-4 units.
31 January 2025 | 23 replies
You want to learn from people who are spending most of their time actually doing deals, not marketing their courses.Being resourceful will get you far in the real estate industry.
Aristotle Kumpis
Is it possible to buy with no money out of pocket?
1 February 2025 | 16 replies
How many times can you spend $1500 to get an 88% return?
Demario Scott
regrouping, getting back to a financial mindset
26 January 2025 | 0 replies
If I had to leave a takeaway from this post before getting too far in it would be that whatever goals are had you have, we have these goals for a reason and typically it does not go exactly as planned but even if it doesn't go as planned, we can pick up where we left off and give it a fresh start.
Carlos Rodriguez
New to US market
11 January 2025 | 9 replies
I'm going to reiterate what's already been mentioned above, but I'm going to actually give you examples of why it's relevant to you to find a U.S. tax professional.1 - You're going to need to file U.S. taxes once you have property down here, there's federal filings, state filings, and sometimes local filings too2 - Tons of tax treaties between the U.S. and Canada that are easy to miss and can cost you a lot of money (important one with rentals - effectively connected income - if the professional you talk to doesn't know what this is, run away)3 - The amount of days you spend in the U.S. needs to be tracked and if you go over a threshold, all of your worldwide income could be taxable by the U.S.4 - Selling real property means up to 15% of your sales proceeds might not be available to you for years (FIRPTA)5 - Lots of nuance at the state and local levels, which both want to take as much money from you as possibleMain takeaway here is that you should find a U.S. based tax person.