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22 January 2025 | 3 replies
There are less taxes in Alberta too.
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8 February 2025 | 13 replies
Deduct NEW property taxes after you buyDeduct home insurance costsDeduct maintenance percentage, typically 10%Deduct vacancy+tenant nonperformance percentage(we recommend 5% for Class A, 10% Class B, 20% Class C, good luck with Class D)Deduct whatever dollar/percentage of cashflow you wantNow, what you have left over is the amount for debt service.Enter it into a mortgage calculator, with current interest rate for an investment property, to determine your maximum mortgage amount.Divide the mortgage amount by either 75% or 80%, depending on the required down payment percentage - this is your tentative price to offer.If the property needs repairs, you'll want to deduct 110%-120% of the estimated repairs from this amount.Be sure to also research the ARV and make sure it's 10-20% higher than your tentative purchase price.As long as the ARV checks out, this is the purchase price to offer.It is probably significantly below the asking price.
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2 February 2025 | 1 reply
Assuming this is an 8 cap neighborhood you'd have a ~$420-450k value within a year (unless property taxes are crazy high) when leases would renew since it'd be valued as a commercial building with the office space.
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21 January 2025 | 5 replies
I am looking to purchase real estate for both investment purpose as well as to offset as much tax liability as possible.
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19 February 2025 | 11 replies
If you own them free and clear you will likely only pay for title and transfer tax on the market value of the property if you want them to be under LLC.
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23 January 2025 | 5 replies
There are two reasons this is a bad idea.Investing with an SDIRA (assuming it is not a Roth) will often result in paying significantly more taxes.
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19 February 2025 | 14 replies
No problem.. what I did with my ridgeland and Madison rentals and I had bought 12 new builds for the Gozone tax bene's post Katrina..
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11 February 2025 | 4 replies
NOI Underwriting Methodology: NRI and EGI, real estate taxes, operating expense underwriting rules of thumb, replacement reserves, appraiser’s impact on lender underwriting, expense comps, etc.10.
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4 February 2025 | 2 replies
I know I'm getting the tax benefits of depreciation, the minimal positive cashflow, and the appreciation on the property, but It's pretty much a long term play of slowly raising rents annually to increase cashflow, which will eventually get basically reset when my loan goes P+I in 10 years.
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22 January 2025 | 10 replies
So all of the gain and depreciation recapture are initially still tax deferred.However, like Joe said, the down side is later when sold you lose the 1031 option. the client will pay tax on all gain and depreciation recaptured from before the 1031 also.