
14 August 2018 | 3 replies
Hi Tim, here are the numbers, not sure if you can access the report?

11 August 2018 | 1 reply
View report*This link comes directly from our calculators, based on information input by the member who posted.

13 August 2018 | 5 replies
-If you have any agent contacts, they can easily pull property reports that will have most of that information on it.

24 April 2019 | 2 replies
Let’s look at 3 examples that back up these claims.Deloitte, one of the largest consulting companies in the world published a report about the future of commercial real estate.

13 August 2018 | 3 replies
View report*This link comes directly from our calculators, based on information input by the member who posted.

11 August 2018 | 0 replies
View report*This link comes directly from our calculators, based on information input by the member who posted.

16 August 2018 | 6 replies
I actually don't know if there is any reported case law on this, but it would be stupid for a court to hold that the landlord is in breach in such a situation.

12 August 2018 | 8 replies
So you should always check with the sponsor or platform to find out for sure.For example, on Arixa Capital (a debt fund I'm invested in), it's reported as interest income.

18 August 2018 | 12 replies
I would check out Crime Reports dotcom for more granular data.

12 August 2018 | 17 replies
Yes, you deduct all the expenses related to rentals on your personal return under Schedule E ( not schedule C as mentioned by @Brian M Sweeney Schedule C is for Trade or business, not rentals)Yes, you can register DBA or create an LLC to run a rental, but you would still report that under Schedule E.