
9 September 2013 | 3 replies
Hello, we rehabbed around 12-15 properties last year and although some of the transactions were a bit complicated because we did a few double closes and what not, it should be easily figured out by a "Real Estate" Accountant whom I hired.

22 October 2013 | 59 replies
My earliest and best advice was from my Grandad (in his 80s at the time), who passed along the old English expression, when I was six:"Look after the pence and the pounds will look after themselves"Early advice aside, I've always had a philosophically complicated relationship with accrual of wealth, our hypocritical financial system - though have made piece with the fact that I need to be on the pointy end of it, broken or not.

11 September 2013 | 12 replies
You have some potential complicated moving parts in this situation.

11 September 2013 | 3 replies
Some states have much more complicated scenarios.

14 September 2013 | 18 replies
A good attorney in real estate law could probably tell you in 15 minutes what the legal effect is but it might be more complicated.

13 September 2013 | 17 replies
Principle reduction is much more complicated due to the tax benifits part and is a topic for another post.

16 September 2013 | 12 replies
Granted, I know there are scenarios where the responsibilities would get more complicated, such as move outs, filling vacancies, evictions, etc.

23 September 2013 | 3 replies
However, I think having real property makes that more complicated and might require going through the court system and hiring an attorney.

13 September 2013 | 3 replies
The complicated scenarios can be fascinating but if you're not already a highly successful RE investor you should probably put more time into the investing side and less into the asset protection side.

10 March 2016 | 20 replies
I made a spread sheet to keep track of which properties the locks were on, Tenant at the time, etc..It sounds a lot more complicated than it really is.