
17 September 2016 | 5 replies
Hi All,I was hoping I could find out what the current rules are on this from any mortgage lenders or brokers: If I buy a house with lended private money when can I refinance into a lower interest loan and cash out the private money folks?

24 September 2016 | 81 replies
They are bending the rules meant to protect the public.

19 September 2016 | 16 replies
For example, I use .50-.60 cents/square foot to determine an estimated rental rate in some of the areas I look at.
17 September 2016 | 15 replies
If following that 30% profit rule of thumb (so $39,000 profit on an ARV of $130k), there'd have to be $55 worth of work that would need to be done to justifiably offer $35k.

21 November 2017 | 1 reply
I believe there's room to raise each rent either $25 or $50 per month, hence raising the value of the properties.

16 September 2016 | 7 replies
Just a rule of thumb though.
23 September 2016 | 7 replies
Following are the similarities and differences between the solo 401k and the self-directed IRA.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 creditors;Both allow for nondeductible contributions; andBoth are prohibited from investing in assets listed under I.R.C. 408(m).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.)

19 September 2016 | 17 replies
I look at it like this yes there's that 1% rule but if the property is less then $100,000 your putting 20% down and your getting cash flow out of it.

21 September 2016 | 10 replies
I was guessing $50/month.

21 September 2016 | 26 replies
Here are numbers i am thinking...With 1% rent rule at 4% mortgage, you can definitely make positive cash flow.Purchase Price: $125,000.