Oren K.
Tax Considerations for Canadians
20 August 2024 | 9 replies
The most common approach to purchasing US real estate as a Canadian is by utilizing an US LLP or LLLP, with the investor as a 99% Limited Partner, and having another entity (such as Can Corp or US LLC) as the General Partner at 1% to limit liability exposure.
Beth Julen
Can I amend my 2022 return to add rental and depreciation?
20 August 2024 | 13 replies
I used TurboTax - bonus points if you know how to make this change there.
Allen Tracy
California CPA Recommendation
23 August 2024 | 54 replies
My returns also got a bit too complicated with niche REI stuff for the great tax guy I used for many years and still does my parents and sisters taxes.They handle other REI guys and attend some REIA groups I went to and knew about bonus depreciation, K1, cost segs, schedule E and HELOC junk used for investing and private lending.
Anna Stohlmann
Getting approved for a mortgage
20 August 2024 | 4 replies
Private lenders allow much more exposure to a same borrower than traditional banks.
George Willey
Equity Options for Property in an LLC
20 August 2024 | 5 replies
Bonus points if you can suggest lenders in AZ...
Marcos Altamirano Toriz
what CRM do you use?
21 August 2024 | 18 replies
Bonus, don't have to pay additional if you have Zoho One.
Clayton Silva
Local vs National
20 August 2024 | 2 replies
There are definitely pros and cons to each so I figured I would just lay out a few benefits and personal thoughts: Small banks/brokerages:Pros:- Some regional knowledge of the market- Possibility of more creative lending guidelines with bank specific programs- Sometimes they have competitive rates for their areaCons: - weak balance sheet (more strict on some guidelines, no wiggle room, inability to be flexible or grant exceptions because they cannot afford to hold less than perfect loans)- Can't scale with clients to different markets- Usually limits exposure to individual investors (they don't want one investor to be too big of a portion of their balance sheet)- Lack of experience with multiple solutions (tend to have 2 or 3 loan products they sell and are too niche to provide tailored solutions)Large banks/brokerages:Pros:- Large compliance departments that understand individual market guidelines (typically each state has specific lending guidelines that augment the national baseline)- Ability to scale into multiple markets with same lender (licensed in many states)- Impossible for individual investors to "outgrow" a large bank's balance sheet (not concerned with one investor's concentration)- More lending solutions available for different scenarios- Often comparable or better rates given the game is volume basedCons:- Can be more difficult to get fast responses if the bank/brokerage does not have good follow up systems in place (or if the underwriting/processing staff gets overwhelmed)- Bad large banks can feel less like a relationship and more like a cog in a factory (less personal)Overall, I have worked from both and worked with both as a loan officer, branch manager, and as an investor/client myself.
Julio Gonzalez
Additional Benefits from Past Cost Segregation Studies
20 August 2024 | 0 replies
The study identifies with forensic engineering detail the immediate Bonus Depreciation 5, 7 and 15-year personal property class lives qualifying portions of a building that are normally buried in 27.5 year residential or 39 year commercial categories.If you have had a cost segregation study performed on your property within the past 10 years, have you evaluated it recently for additional benefits that could be obtained?
Keaton Schultz
I'm 24 with 2,500+ units
21 August 2024 | 7 replies
I have spent hours talking to tenants who are sick with mold exposure or who’s houses have wood rot so bad they should be condemned.
Zane K.
Thoughts on Huntsville, Alabama?
20 August 2024 | 32 replies
Especially with cost segregation and bonus depreciation, it can make a HUGE difference in your calculations.