
5 June 2024 | 4 replies
Will title insurance still cover any leans/unpaid taxes if any?

5 June 2024 | 11 replies
Pretty rare from what I see that cities allow or want this....turns single family neighborhood into multi family and most of the zoning people don't like this.Plenty of issues from their point of few of why they don't like it.....parking is one...now no one parking in garage, and potential for more cars...so now 3-4-5 cars in the street.More taxing on the water/sewer/trash/police/fire/city services.I wish you the best of luck with this.

6 June 2024 | 18 replies
We run the number of these properties on the calc of BP and they would give us with conservative numbers on the rehab (estimating to put more than needed) and on the rents (market rent but conservative), good returns, like Cash on Cash return (CoC) between 2-6% and Cash Flow between 986 to 12000 per year, so anything from 100 month to 1000 a month, after expenses were taken, so from this cash flows only taxes are missing to be taken, with some properties needing us to put from minimum 40k to 90k down including rehabbing them.

5 June 2024 | 4 replies
Our household income is currently $320k pre-tax, but I might be getting a new job soon, which could bump our income to around $380-400k pre-tax.Initially, we planned to buy a property and convert it into a duplex, but with houses in our area starting at $650k, we've started considering a different approach.

5 June 2024 | 1 reply
I have a strong credit score and expect I would be able to get approved for this mortgage.Monthly taxes = $155/month ($1,860 annually)Annual insurance = Estimated $166/month (~$2,000 annually)Annual HOA = $196/month ($2,352 annually)Maintenance = Estimated $250/month ($3,000 annually) (0.5% of property value given that this is a newer build.

5 June 2024 | 10 replies
It's interesting that many of these VC-backed PMC's, despite having 10k+ properties under management, aren't doing well financially - one of them just merged with another industry-related company also not doing well.Just for fun, here's a partial list of PMC expenses that owners pretend don't exist:Office rentComputers, printers & softwareInternet & phone billOffice furnitureOffice supplies: paper, postage, ink, etc.Office liability insuranceAuto expenses: monthly payment, insurance, gas, maintenance, registration/plate feesBroker license fees: annual, monthly board & MLS fees, continuing education fees, E&O insuranceEquipment: lockboxes, signs, etc.Business income tax preparation and paymentsStaff payroll & payroll taxes Time Tasks: answering phones, calling past due tenants, scheduling tours, taking marketing pics, processing those pics, writing ads, researching rent amounts, posting ads, explaining to owners how rent determined & showing where ad posted, opening & processing mail, posting payments, bank deposits, scanning documents & posting to owner & tenant portals, explaining accounting to owners so they understand their monthly statements, taking pics/videos of repairs, finding reputable handymen and contractors, confirming they're properly licensed & insured and tracking annually, verifying repairs done properly, processing invoices for utility bills, repairs, taxes, city inspections, scheduling periodic property evaluations/inspections with tenants that don't want strangers in their homes, explaining to owners why something is taking so long, and more & more & more...OBSERVATION: many owners only want to pay a flat fee or 50% of a month of rent as a leasing fee - without realizing the repercussions.

6 June 2024 | 57 replies
Appreciate your input, I've looked and analyzed a deal recently for a very small facility (70 units) about 9k sq ft of space in New Jersey with cap of 10% (but thats before the tax reset and needed capex).

4 June 2024 | 1 reply
Hello,All else being equal (other than the 2022 tax abatement for the gray’s ferry property) what area do people think would appreciate more and offer best rents?

4 June 2024 | 2 replies
Only considering because we could sell both tax-free being primaries 2 of last 5 years, and expenses are going up on both, and we may be able to get better returns elsewhere.

5 June 2024 | 27 replies
There are also some great tax benefits to investing in opportunity zones which are commonly located in C and D areas.