Alex Hall
Subto FHA problem
20 January 2025 | 57 replies
If you did not do a "wrap mortgage" or "mirror mortgage" to help them create "notes receivable income", they may need a cosigner to have enough income to qualify for their next mortgage.
Dan Green
1st Position Heloc for Rental
13 January 2025 | 4 replies
This property gives me significant income, so losing it would be an extreme loss.
Steven Catudal
Investing in Alabama as out of state investor with a partner
15 January 2025 | 12 replies
We are not focused on the passive income at this time as both working W2.Questions:1.
David Jesperson
Fix and Flip First Experience
17 January 2025 | 5 replies
Absolutely, the passive income from owning rentals is great but I also love getting into big projects and seeing the transformation from start to finish@David Jesperson What city/market are you looking to buy and what type of properties are you looking for, SF, 2-4 MF, or 5+ MF?
Louis Hamilton
HELOC Best Option - Rental Property
15 January 2025 | 6 replies
So I do currently have income from my rental properties, however it isnt enough to cover our current costs over here for the next 6 months.
Chris Ke
200k down payment available and I can benefit from tax deductions
14 January 2025 | 5 replies
Focus on tax-saving strategies such as cost segregation studies and bonus depreciation to accelerate deductions.By qualifying as a Real Estate Professional (spending 750+ hours annually and materially participating), you can offset your wife’s S-Corp income with real estate losses, reducing your tax liability.
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.
Josh Smith
HOA management in Pigeon Forge
1 February 2025 | 3 replies
At $400/month/cabin, our total annual assessment income is $48,000.
Chris Magistrado
Cybersecurity, Recruiting, or Real Estate?
14 January 2025 | 3 replies
Lastly, always keep your job and build your employment foundation because that keeps you income relevant and lendable.Hey thanks for your reply!
Mariah Volk
A few questions!
31 January 2025 | 4 replies
I'll add on to what the other Ben said and mention that there are exceptions based on the # of days that you rent out your home to where the income/expenses are excludable (being lesser of 14 days or 10% of total usage if under 140 personal use days).