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Results (4,711+)
Faustin Hoover Utilities and maintenance
4 December 2023 | 9 replies
If you have 1 and 2 bed units, you would typically divide bill by number of bedrooms, and multiply back the number in each unit.As for snow, personally, I always had tenants take care of any individual use areas, i.e. a small porch that directly access to only one unit, the tenant needs to shovel and salt that area.  
Thomas Dorwin Sell your house at a loss or make it a rental?
18 May 2015 | 9 replies
On a $450,000 house even if he clears  your optimistic $2,500 a month your talking about a gross rent multiplier of less then half a percent per month.  
Brian Dudash How to estimate income tax for rentals?
2 February 2020 | 15 replies
Then take that taxable income of $3,701 and multiply that by your appropriate tax bracket %?
Joey Devlin Trying to analyze multi family deal/figure out how to finance with no W2
15 January 2024 | 5 replies
To be confident moving forward, I would check Rent comps for my terminal product's units, draw that up into GOI, calculate expenses or just multiply by 0.7-0.75 to subtract annual expenses (utilities, maintenance, taxes, insurance, etc) and arrive at NOI, then subtract my other expenses (like debt/loan payments) over the year, to see what we're looking at in potential CF once fully stabilized.
Jephte Augustin Short-term rental tax deductions and their impact on W-2 income
22 April 2023 | 4 replies
You take he non-passive losses you have multiplied by your marginal tax rate.  
Daniel Murphy Cost seg & STR loophole from a financial planners perspective
15 October 2023 | 8 replies
These estimates always tend to show the max amount of bonus deprecation multiplied by the HIGHEST tax rate = your estimated tax benefit.  1) Most of us are not in the highest tax rates and:2) Tax rates step both up and down, so you can't simply take the bonus depreciation multiplied by a tax rate. 
Amar Amar Salisbury, MD Rental market ?
19 December 2023 | 6 replies
I’d have to know more about location, most of the shore (and this isn’t a hard rule) but if you take you pp and multiply that by 0.075 than divide that by 12 is a good starting point.
Gin Zhuang How to find out the land and improvement value of my Atlanta property
22 January 2024 | 2 replies
If you want to be conservative on your estimate, you can take the total purchase price of the property and multiply it by 40% then apply the millage rate.
Justin Goodin (Simply Explained) Most common return metrics
25 January 2024 | 1 reply
Equity Multiple:How many times you are multiplying your money when it's all said and done.4.