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3 May 2024 | 33 replies
@Barry Pekin does the title company have to be in the sa e town or city ad the property ?
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2 May 2024 | 5 replies
Lenders will use your tax returns schedule E to calculate your monthly rental income.
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1 May 2024 | 4 replies
Such short term rental will follow these criteria(see numbered list below), in order to take advantage of (1) qualifying to fill out schedule E, thus avoiding the Self-Employment tax should there be any profits. and (2) being able to offset your W2 income should there be a paper loss.
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1 May 2024 | 7 replies
It's very intuitive and has key functions that I really needed like the ability to quickly categorize transactions into categories that sync with your Schedule E for tax time, the ability to set up accounts for each property and sub accounts for specific things related to each property.
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3 May 2024 | 19 replies
AND The landlord notified the tenant in writing that the tenancy is not subject to the “just cause” and rent increase limitations as specifically described in Civil Code Sections 1946.2(e)(8)(B)(i) and 1947.12(d)(5)(B)(i).
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30 April 2024 | 4 replies
And there's no circumstance in which they can go on Schedule E. i.e., you just take the hit.That makes sense/seems fair.
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29 April 2024 | 2 replies
The "15" is the Price-to-earnings ratio, or "P/E".But that doesn't mean the stock price doesn't move.
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28 April 2024 | 8 replies
You will report your rental income and expenses on Schedule E.
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30 April 2024 | 18 replies
S&P 500 beats RE by double.S&P 500 = $900,000Real Estate = $460,000However, these units are good for someone who wants to dip into real estate while using their unit any time they want with the aforementioned owner perks but without the hassle that ownership brings like maintenance, roof, bad tenants, furnishings, bill payments like SDG&E, internet etc.
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28 April 2024 | 11 replies
You'd continue to report your rental income and expenses on Schedule E and have the added expense of renewing the LLC each year.