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Results (7,748+)
Brian Dear A Texan that lives in France, invests in Texas
11 September 2015 | 6 replies
I've built the system that powers the Tribeca Film Festival, I've worked for various well known startups and I'm the cofounder of an online behavioral health startup, iCouch.
Joshua Cornell Seller Financing Deal Within the Family
28 March 2023 | 3 replies
My brother sent me a business plan that he wants to start up with me involving our grandmother's 80 acre farm.
James Calabrese Form LLC for write offs regardless of buying in my name or LLC?
16 September 2015 | 5 replies
Though any expense you incur prior to being in business can be capitalized and potentially written off as a start-up expense.
Ryan Cooper Yearly fees on Self Directed IRA (SDIRA)
13 January 2016 | 7 replies
The Self-Directed IRA and Solo 401k Similarities Both were created by congress for individuals to save for retirement;Both may be invested in alternative investments such as real estate, precious metals tax liens, promissory notes, private company shares, and stocks and mutual funds, to name a few;Both allow for Roth contributions;Both are subject to prohibited transaction rules;Both are subject to federal taxes at time of distribution;Both allow for checkbook control for placing alternative investments;Both may be invested in annuities;Both are protected from bankruptcy creditors;Both are prohibited from investing in assets listed under I.R.C. 408(m); andNeither may be directly invested in your own business startup 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 (self-directed IRA LLC) must be utilized;The solo 401k allows for checkbook control outside the LLC;The solo 401k allows for personal loan known as a solo 401k loan; If you borrow from your own IRA, it will be deemed a taxable distribution;Unlike an IRA, a Solo 401k can invest in life insurance;The solo 401k allow for high contribution amounts (for 2015; 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 his or her solo 401k;The self-directed IRA participant/owner may not serve as trustee or custodian of his or her IRA; instead, a trust company or bank institution is required;Unlike an IRA, generally 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, generally 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--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 401k RMD requirement;Roth IRA funds are not subject to requirement minimum distributions (RMDs);The fair market value (FMV) of assets held in a self-directed IRA is reported on form 5498;The fair market value of assets held in a solo 401k are reported on Form 5500-EZ;At termination, the solo 401k is required to file a final Form 5500-EZ and 1099-R; andAt termination, the self-directed IRA is only required to file a form 1099-R.
Brandon Pack New member from Paintsville, KY
29 July 2013 | 8 replies
One day we were talking about the coal markets and both shared the dreams of getting way from the coal market and start up a construction/real estate/land development business.
Drew Wiard Flip vs Hold/Rent with your Solo 401(k)?
28 April 2015 | 34 replies
If you want to do flipping inside a retirement account, consider using the Rollover as Business Startup (ROBS) as it is not subject to UBIT. 
Marquise Crampton "start up"funds
20 June 2015 | 0 replies

Good Evening, I am a rather new investor currently closing my second deal. Im looking into ways to increase my buying power to a level lenders like to play at. I've been sniffing around the idea of using credit cards ...

Sean Fuller New Real Estate Investor in DC
25 January 2016 | 2 replies
I am new to real estate investing but I am trying to build a startup that invest in rental suites in homeowners home.
Todd Goedeke Solo 401k and Short Term Rentals
24 February 2018 | 4 replies
Look up Rollover Business startup(ROBS)
Eric Prescott 4567 TM Henderson Ave
23 December 2022 | 1 reply
It was too late to get the seller back to my original offer, but my wife was willing to step in and co-sign to switch to a conventional loan (I'm a self-employed consultant, which kills my DTI), which even with the PMC's lowest rent estimate should return cash flow from day one of the lease, notwithstanding start-up costs and having to give up 1% of the seller's credit in switching to the conventional loan.