Kelly Pintos
How would you invest 200k as a first-time property investor?
21 January 2025 | 2 replies
Low barrier to entry, low taxes, landlord friendly, some amazing class A and B suburbs and a strong urban core.
Raul Velazquez
REI in Vancouver, BC
17 January 2025 | 9 replies
That helps some...but your variable expenses also go up too - property insurance & taxes - so a lot of your rent increases go to offset rising variable expenses.I started at the age of 47 in 2018 and we bought properties fast and furious - 12 the first year, 10 the next, and 9 in 2021 and currently have 38 properties.
Mike Levene
House Hacking In Expensive Markets
16 January 2025 | 23 replies
It's a balance of cashflow and wealth accumulation.One of the goals is to have tenants pay as much of your cost-of-ownership as possible (loans, taxes, insurance, etc.)In high-cost areas, any Class A or B property you buy will usually negative cashflow for the first 3-5 years, until rents rise enough to cover the negative cashflow + rising taxes & insurance.Investing OOS increases your risks because you may not know the market and you can't check on everything/everyone all the time.If you move forward with your buddies, HIGHLY recommend creating a solid Partnership Agreement!
Logan Jamieson
Frustration with current market: Seeking wisdom, encouragement, lend me your tenacity
4 February 2025 | 17 replies
and that was owner occ.. todays rates are pretty normal actually. what you can do if you want though is find a really good HML and let them place a loan for you making 10 to 12% while your wait for things to change to a situation that you feel you want to move forward be more net return than buying a rental thats for sure. of course no tax bene's but there really is not that much tax benefit on one rental.. so just some alternatives.
Tyler Bolton
LLC versus personal umbrella policy for Indianapolis SFH rental
12 January 2025 | 7 replies
>>For purposes of taxes, consult with a CPA to confirm this would work for your situation, but you could have the LLC be treated as a "disregarded entity" and thus, even if you and your wife are members, any profits/losses would "disregard" the LLC and go directly on your personal returns.
Derek Harville
Grandmother wants to leave/give me trailer! Help!
4 February 2025 | 8 replies
You could structure the deal as an installment sale or a lease option so the property owner doesn't see a large capital gain tax payment for the sale.And good on you for helping out!
Lauren Ruppert
How do you get a spouse's name off of the property if divorcing?
25 January 2025 | 5 replies
There are also tax implications.
Makani Donaldson
How to be of use
3 February 2025 | 9 replies
I've been knocking on doors, there is one that seems like it's abandoned, however despite finding the owners name from tax records I cannot seem to get in contract with them to make an offer (despite trying x, y and z).
Shiloh Lundahl
New Partnership Model
4 February 2025 | 87 replies
Who covers the tax bill when they don't pay the tax bill or the insurance?
Adam Hardy
Putting rental under LLC
15 January 2025 | 1 reply
Am I setting myself up for a tax nightmare?