Justin Woods
Cost Segregation - Bonus Depreciation on House Hack
26 November 2024 | 13 replies
My question is, can I do a study on a home that is currently my primary residence and not yet a rental but will become a rental and I use the paper loss in the future when I need it but have captured the 100% bonus depreciation by doing the cost segregation study in 2022?
Nakul Patel
LLC formation question
19 November 2024 | 5 replies
This means that you will probably need to pay registration and filing fees in at least 2 states if you don’t buy CA property as a CA resident.Be sure to tell your accountant that you may now need to file non-resident income tax returns in each state where you own property as well.
Craig Oram
JWB experience - My thoughts, let me know yours
28 November 2024 | 22 replies
Hi @Dawn Bertrand, I'm sorry that you feel this way about your experience as a resident of JWB.
Don Underwood
2/1 on 1/2 acre near Ross, TX
29 November 2024 | 0 replies
Investment Info:Single-family residence fix & flip investment.
John Kelly
LLC at homestead house hack
22 November 2024 | 7 replies
You have two properties, one of which is your primary residence.
Hunter Hanlon Taylor
Short-term rental (first property)
19 November 2024 | 3 replies
Quote from @Hunter Hanlon Taylor: Investment Info:Single-family residence buy & hold investment.
Charlie Martin
Creative financing for first time buyer?
26 November 2024 | 6 replies
You can acquire a primary residence as low as 3.5% FHA or 3%-5% for conventional.
Jessica Wix
Investment Property 1
1 December 2024 | 0 replies
Investment Info:Single-family residence buy & hold investment.
Ryon Pax
HELOC Payoff Advice
2 December 2024 | 4 replies
The easiest and straight forward option would be, as you said, to sell the current residence, payoff the HELOC (or most of it) and then get back to saving with your jobs and the rental cashflow.
Matt Wan
Foreign debt's effect on mortgage application
2 December 2024 | 0 replies
People responded by explaining that residential mortgage lenders are looking for US-based customers, who have their residence, income and assets in the States.How do they view foreign debt?