
29 January 2017 | 7 replies
Is Allure Vinyl the best flooring choice?

28 January 2017 | 10 replies
The tier system takes into account: Average unemployment rateMedian household incomePercentage growth in populationAdjusted property tax base per capitaPoverty level, age of housing stock, proximity to adjacent county employment, employment sector concentration, at risk industries, ... these data points are not part of the tier ranking algorithm.

14 September 2018 | 33 replies
I have heard about people searching for an outside number for employment listed, but never for a previous landlord.

27 January 2017 | 1 reply
However there are several exemptions under to the non qualified usage time listed: https://www.irs.gov/publications/p17/ch15.html https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p523.pdfThat indicate that Any other period of temporary absence (not to exceed an aggregate period of 2 years) due to change of employment, health conditions, or such other unforeseen circumstances as may be specified by the IRS does not count as non qualified use.

27 January 2017 | 3 replies
The Self-Directed IRA and Solo 401k DifferencesIn order to open a solo 401k, self-employment, whether on a part-time or full-time basis, is required;To open a self-directed IRA, self-employment income is not required;In order to gain IRA checkbook control over the self-directed IRA funds, a limited liability company (IRA LLC) must be utilized;The solo 401k allows for checkbook control from the onset;The solo 401k allows for personal loan known as a solo 401k loan;It is prohibited to borrow from your IRA;The Solo 401k may be invested in life insurance;The self-directed IRA may not be invested in life insurance;The solo 401k allow for high contribution amounts (for 2016, the solo 401k contribution limit is $53,000, whereas the self-directed IRA contribution limit is $5,500);The solo 401k business owner can serve as trustee of the solo 401k;The self-directed IRA participant/owner may not serve as trustee or custodian of her IRA; instead, a trust company or bank institution is required;When distributions commence from the solo 401k a mandatory 20% of federal taxes must be withheld from each distribution and submitted electronically to the IRS by the 15th of the month following the date of each distribution;Rollovers and/or transfers from IRAs or qualified plans (e.g., former employer 401k) to a solo 401k are not reported on Form 5498, but rather on Form 5500-EZ, but only if the air market value of the solo 401k exceeds $250K as of the end of the plan year (generally 12/31);When funds are rolled over or transferred from an IRA or 401k to a self-directed IRA, the amount deposited into the self-directed IRA is reported on Form 5498 by the receiving self-directed IRA custodian by May of the year following the rollover/transfer.Rollovers (provided the 60 day rollover window is satisfied) from an IRA to a Solo 401k or self-directed IRA are reported on lines 15a and 15b of Form 1040;Pre-tax IRA contributions on reported on line 32 of Form 1040;Pre-tax solo 401k contributions are reported on line 28 of Form 1040;Roth solo 401k funds are subject to RMDs;A Roth 401k may be transferred to a Roth IRA (Note that from a planning perspective, it may be advantageous to transfer Roth Solo 401k funds to a Roth IRA before turning age 70 ½ in order to escape the Roth RMD requirement applicable to Roth 401k contributions including Roth Solo 401k contributions and earnings.)

26 January 2017 | 4 replies
Most large banks will not view a self-employed person favorably.

27 January 2017 | 2 replies
I'm in the process of getting an SBA loan for my business which is self proprietor, self employed.

1 February 2017 | 9 replies
Not sure if this is like a AA meeting but here goes lol.Hi, my name is Kyle Mcdonald I'm 25 been working full time since I was 15, I have been self employed full time now going on 4 years.

28 January 2017 | 5 replies
The three exemptions listed are Any portion of the 5-year period ending on the date of the sale or exchange after the last date you (or your spouse) use the property as a main home;Any period (not to exceed an aggregate period of 10 years) during which you (or your spouse) are serving on qualified official extended duty: As a member of the uniformed services;As a member of the Foreign Service of the United States; orAs an employee of the intelligence community; andAny other period of temporary absence (not to exceed an aggregate period of 2 years) due to change of employment, health conditions, or such other unforeseen circumstances as may be specified by the IRS.I am trying to figure out if exemption 3 is applicable if you go over 2 years, and you would be trying to figure out how much of exemption 1 applies to your situation.

24 January 2019 | 4 replies
She has easily verified employment at a large university near by.