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5 March 2024 | 11 replies
This will increase the return above what can be obtained on a passive investment.The flipside of having the power to control everything is that it can be alot of work (and a full-time job if a person is putting in sweat equity).
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5 March 2024 | 70 replies
It sounds like your finances are tight as a young professional with a family, I'd advice work on increasing your W2 income, with more education or training.
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3 March 2024 | 9 replies
Maybe the unfinished basement becomes a "wellness space" and you can attract yogis and hippie coaches and upsell for retreats.
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3 March 2024 | 7 replies
I'm wondering if some existing owners are getting out of short-term rentals because of the numbers, which would further reduce supply and, the thinking goes, increase revPAR/occupancy.)
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3 March 2024 | 0 replies
(I could probably get this increased but I'd have to get primary residence Sq ft re-evaluated since the basement is finished and heated but of course thay would increase my property taxes.)Thinking about refinancing primary residence and taking money out to do the additional building.
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3 March 2024 | 1 reply
so most people will have to be as leveraged as possible to scale (at the beginning). as in, keep your LTV high and focus on buying 'as much' ($$) RE as possible. this is if you're doing a pretty run of the mill REI strategy like buy and hold. i came across an interesting guideline once: if you could sell today and net 7x+ your annual true net cashflow, you should cash-out/refi, or sell/1031. think of it this way: if your portfolio in a year is worth 1m market value, and you owe 600k, and have a lender that will do a portfolio loan at 80% ltv, you could cashout refi and get 200k to play with (minus closing costs). when you compare the now-lower cashflow from the existing portfolio (higher LTV & maybe different rate), to what you can do with 200k cash, THAT'S where it gets fun. maybe you lose 1k/mo in cashflow on the original portfolio (literally just made up a number, idk), but you can gain 2500/mo in cashflow with that 200k.. then doing the cashout/refi earned you a net increase in your monthly profit of 1500/mo, plus you're getting debt paydown and appreciation on "more" real estate, probably getting bigger tax benefits, etc.
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4 March 2024 | 13 replies
A cost segregation study can be done on a SFH which would increase your depreciation expense.The bigger question is would you benefit from the added depreciation.
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4 March 2024 | 30 replies
So I have to figure out how to attract them, and at the right price.
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2 March 2024 | 43 replies
Did you increase the property tax basis to the new acquisition value?
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3 March 2024 | 4 replies
Factor in at least 40-50% of rents going to operating expenses.Financing: 30-year mortgages will have lower monthly payments than 15-year loans, increasing cash flow.