
29 March 2017 | 1 reply
Hello,I am looking for a tax accountant that has experience in advising foreign clients (i.e. non-citizens who will be non-residents for tax purposes (>180 days outside of the US)).

27 February 2019 | 17 replies
Andy insurance has been a big pain in the butt on these types of deals for me.What I have found is these options.1.Add as an additional insured - Usually this is fine for the first year then upon renewal insurance company says you can't be on policy or have the seller financed you has to be primary.So adding me as secondary when I hold title or me having a policy but they are secondary who financed me but has the senior loan is the problem.2.You can get an additional policy which cost money as you mentioned above in addition to the seller who financed you's policy they have.

11 October 2012 | 17 replies
A business partner of mine is having a commercial loan called by Citizens bank.

21 May 2013 | 12 replies
Believe it or not, some homeowners have asked about my immigration status and if I am green card holder or a US citizen!!!

13 October 2017 | 5 replies
@Jessey Kwong Keep in mind that as a non U.S. citizen that you will not be able to get conventional financing.

19 November 2019 | 26 replies
They have such things already for seniors notifying relatives, if for instance, if the electric bill isn't paid.For $150/year, I'm more than happy to buy it for the tenant.

7 December 2017 | 4 replies
If you’re earning income then I imagine you are filing your taxes here in the US that is if you are a citizen or resident living abroad.

7 January 2018 | 37 replies
My opinion.. try out something local and if you can't afford it, then you probably should probably skip the $6 Starbucks coffees for a while, steal McDonald coupons from senior centers, sell your new car, and ride the bus.Not always the case.

16 January 2018 | 2 replies
If the assessed value is lower than market value, it could be because the current owner is entitled to tax exemptions (homestead exemption, veteran's exemption, and senior citizen's exemption are a few examples), and these are sometimes also tied to limits on annual assessment increases.

13 November 2017 | 7 replies
No 2016 Tax return because I was a senior in college.