
27 June 2024 | 0 replies
Investment Info:
Single-family residence fix & flip investment.
Purchase price: $128,900
Cash invested: $50,000
Sale price: $310,000
Contributors:
Peter Vekselman
Partner Driv...

27 June 2024 | 1 reply
Investment Info:
Single-family residence fix & flip investment.
Purchase price: $295,000
Cash invested: $10,000
Sale price: $400,000
Contributors:
Peter Vekselman
Partner Driv...

29 June 2024 | 13 replies
Out-of-state turnkey may sound attractive, but the cash flow is low and the perceived passivity is too high as you still need to manage the manager to be successful.Go to some local real estate meetups, talk to other investors near you and see where they are investing and at what price point.

29 June 2024 | 8 replies
Seems like a lot of brain damage for very little gain.

28 June 2024 | 41 replies
I have a completely separate entity that my wife and I own for our "passive" investments.

29 June 2024 | 10 replies
Facts to consider: The condo is in my husbands name, has been for about 5 years so the capital gains taxes would be ours to pay upon sale.

28 June 2024 | 6 replies
---They can defer capital gains and still have cashflow with no headaches.Try negotiating 5%/$12k down so you still have funds for deferred maintenance.After 3-5 years, you can refinance to pay seller off.CHALLENGE: you better check everything out financially and with the properties (well inspections, etc.) to make sure seller is not dumping their problems on you.
28 June 2024 | 14 replies
@Mike Most The Great job on building your equity base and how smart you are to be looking to othe markets, I work with out of state/country investors and help them create passive income with midwest rentals and here's a few things to consider:- Competition is everywhere and only growing in any worthwhile area, so instead of looking for places with less of it I'd focus on building the team that can still deliver results. - The time is always NOW, so many people stayed out of the "fight" over the last few years and now with rate hikes they are kicking themselves because they missed out.

27 June 2024 | 4 replies
I am military, and from what I’ve read there is an exclusion of capital gains taxes out to 15 yrs vs the normal 5 for military members.However, I only lived at the property for 18 months, not the 2 years required.

28 June 2024 | 29 replies
Hey your messege is a bit confusing - seeYou can avoid capital gains tax when you sell your primary residence by buying another house and using the 121 home sale exclusion.