
5 March 2018 | 2 replies
I’ve heard about various methods like “Ghosting” and staking out auctions, but I’m wondering if there is some program I can purchase or company I can hire to generate these buyers list for me?

5 March 2018 | 11 replies
You're wrong.Properties aren't listed in some arbitrary method.

13 March 2018 | 10 replies
I've also read on forums that the customer service is super limited with this method, by email only, so no personal touch at all, which obviously, is the cornerstone of a real estate agent's value, along with their knowledge and expertise of their local market.The day we can take emotions out of selling or buying real estate is the day realtors will cease to exist.

11 March 2018 | 12 replies
Is thete another method I could use that wouldn't cost me anything?

16 May 2018 | 9 replies
If more than 100 results, again, add another letter to reduce the results set.This is the basic idea of method by which all of the accounts can be accessed.

21 April 2018 | 7 replies
The basement does not have a bath.I can spend about CAD 10-15 K and convert it into a duplex with 1 side yielding a rent of around CAD 1 K.The basement business gives CAD 2 K monthly, allowing me to effectively stay for free in the house.I have a few questions:Since no real estate agents are involved, what will be the best method to determine the correct value of the house?

13 March 2018 | 40 replies
BRRR works and is really profitable, but if you want to ask about specific deals than you're going to find some that use this method poorly.

22 March 2020 | 33 replies
@Hiro Kitagawa, qualified improvement property has become a bit more interesting than your CPA made it out to be.Now, there is in fact a category for owners of non-residential real property called qualified improvement property (QIP) that as of 1/1/18 replaced the old qualified improvement property (yes, same), qualified leasehold improvement, qualified retail improvement, and qualified restaurant property classification rules, as well as includes some property that would not have fallen into those buckets previously.The committee reports indicated that QIP placed in service on or after 1/1/18 would be eligible for a 15-year depreciable life as well as bonus depreciation rather than the standard 39-year, non-bonus eligible method applied to non-residential real property.However, the law was not drafted correctly, i.e., there was a technical error, and the section of the tax code describing 15-year property (Section 168(e)(3)(E)) was in fact not amended to include qualified improvement property.So for now, strictly-speaking, in 2018, qualified improvement property is regular old 39-year property that is not eligible for bonus depreciation.We do expect that a technical correction to the law will be made, but for now the IRS has actually stated that it cannot guarantee that absent legislative correction it will accept the legislatively intended change in recovery period and bonus eligibility.Anyway, this is neither here nor there since you have stated you are a landlord of residential rental property rather than non-residential real estate.And this does not affect the application of 100% bonus depreciation to both qualifying new and used property place in service after 9/27/17 and before 1/1/23 that @Yonah Weiss pointed out.

11 March 2018 | 4 replies
Thanks @Steve Vaughan and @Wil Reichard, So if I am not planning on doing the BRRRR method, because I don't want to deal with all the rehab that will be needed, how else would you go about it, given my situation?

15 March 2018 | 17 replies
@Upen Patel You made me curious when you say that a HML is a mortgage irrespective of whether it has been recorded are you saying in the sense that it’s a loan on a piece of property and therefore a mortgage or is there another method of legally recording a mortgage?