Dan H.
Underwriting STR - Looks promising but deeper evaluation shows poor return
15 December 2024 | 13 replies
Quote from @Andrew Steffens: It is tough to find positive CoC but not impossible.
Ed Lopez
Excessive "Make Ready" Costs from Property Manager
21 January 2025 | 35 replies
We get into RE to have a positive impact on our lives.
Jeff Shaver
Need Advice on how to best use my equity.
23 December 2024 | 15 replies
With your equity and clear goals, you’re well-positioned to scale—best of luck!
Jorge Abreu
Celebrating Success and Building Relationships 🎉🤝
20 December 2024 | 3 replies
But always keep your core values front and center.I’m curious... now that you’ve got this momentum, what’s the next step you’re considering to deepen those relationships and keep the positive energy flowing?
Eva Sha
Commercial Real Estate Investing, how to get started or finding a mentor?
19 December 2024 | 22 replies
Typically speaking 20% down (80% LTV) is the bare minimum that commercial lending requires. 10% down is unheard of unless you are getting a great deal and negotiate some small seller financing in second position or getting an SBA Loan for acquisition where your business will occupy over 51% of.
William Stephen Uren
New member looking to learn
17 December 2024 | 7 replies
We pride ourselves in keeping the forums positive, helpful, and focused on real estate (please, no politics, religion, etc.).
Raul Fernandez Jr
What would you do in my scenario. Looking to purchase second property as investment.
17 December 2024 | 3 replies
Hi Community,I am in a position where I can tap into the equity of my primary home to purchase a second investment property.
Ben Johnson
Rental Income only - HELOC (accessing equity in hard times) HELP!
15 December 2024 | 12 replies
To answer one of your questions, I doubt you will ever find someone willing to give a loan in 2nd position on an investment property.
Jevani P. Barron
Seeking Advice on Investment Property Strategy: Cash-Out Refi, Raise Rent, or Sell?
20 December 2024 | 6 replies
Once that phase is complete, I’d transition back into long-term holds.As for the cash-out refi, without at least doubling the rent, I’d be in a net-negative position each month, which doesn’t seem like a worthwhile trade-off.On the tenant side, I agree with your point about the business aspect—it’s something I’m working on coming to terms with.
Melanie Baldridge
Bonus depreciation ?
16 December 2024 | 0 replies
Bonus depreciation is just a special part of the US tax code.It allows you to take accelerated depreciation on portions of your property depending on when an asset is put into service.At the time of this writing, you can write off a huge portion (60% in 2024) of many qualified components that have a useful lifespan of 15 years or less.That means a certain percentage of things like landscaping, sidewalks, latches, appliances, fences, certain flooring, etc is depreciable in year 1.The bonus depreciation rate percentage changes yearly depending on the administration and the tax code.For years 2015 through 2017 first-year depreciation for all the items on a 15-year schedule or less was set to 50%.It was scheduled to go down to 40% in 2018 and 30% in 2019 and then 0% in 2020.But then Trump got elected, and he enacted the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.That moved the bonus depreciation percentage to 100% from 2017 to 2022.In 2023 it went down to 80% and it’s currently at 60%.Depending on who gets elected again, 100% may be back on the table.Only time will tell.We know that the US government wants to incentivize more development and ownership of RE.They want Americans to continue to build and maintain our physical world.That’s why real estate is one of the most tax-advantaged assets in the US.Depreciation and bonus depreciation for RE are very positive and will likely continue in the years ahead.