
4 October 2024 | 14 replies
@Clare Yuritch / @Byron Valles are you using it for personal use or with clients as advisors?

4 October 2024 | 3 replies
I will be primarily wholesaling but I personally will be looking for Buy and Hold of single family and residential multi family units.

2 October 2024 | 25 replies
Savannah all I have is one of my houses has a damaged roof, that's it and feel fortunate.

6 October 2024 | 1 reply
These moves could spur further economic growth in the area, create jobs, and possibly attract more tech investments, all of which could have ripple effects on commercial real estate and local housing markets.For investors, this development could present opportunities in both residential and commercial real estate, especially with the potential influx of new employees and businesses to support these expanding operations.

2 October 2024 | 6 replies
When it comes to tenant screening, it's important to balance your right as a landlord to protect your property with compliance with Fair Housing laws and local regulations.

6 October 2024 | 8 replies
For anyone that hasn't used Doorvest, it's a simple website where you put a $1000 deposit and they send you curated list of houses they buy that need renovation, renovate, and then tell you a final purchase price along with guaranteeing things such as first year rent will be 100% covered by them even if they don't find tenants.

2 October 2024 | 3 replies
Not sure I'm quite in the position to mentor, but my wife and I have house hacked and broker a lot of rent by the room properties in Atlanta.I'd be happy to share a few nuggets!

3 October 2024 | 15 replies
If you are house hacking or low money down owner-occupancy, that helps.I also agree with @Chris Seveney, it depends what you want to invest in.

2 October 2024 | 16 replies
We have a house on 3 acres near a neighborhood, and we're considering listing it on Airbnb.

4 October 2024 | 5 replies
The current tax code provides special benefits in this situation.When the original owner passes away, the "basis" of the assets resets to the market value at the date of death.In the US, there is currently an estate tax exemption of approximately $13 million per person, which allows the basis to reset, and depreciation can start anew.This “step-up in basis” is particularly useful if the next generation wants to sell the asset.Since their basis is set at market value, if the property is sold at that value either at the date of death or within six months, there is no capital gain and no taxable event.There have been many examples where portfolios of fully depreciated real estate worth tens of millions of dollars have been passed down from one generation to the next, resulting in little to no tax liabilities for their heirs.Pretty cool, right?