
16 January 2017 | 5 replies
I heard it was a long, complicated & costly process for a foreigner.

15 January 2017 | 2 replies
Is there anything about the past bankruptcy that complicates or prevents the sale from moving forward if we agree to an amount that covers the bank's foreclosure judgment.

16 January 2017 | 5 replies
You can definitely always save money doing the project yourself by hiring / managing the multiple sub-contractors, but the question is going to be can you apply and pull permits yourself (same cities requires licensed GCs to do so) and do you have the time to manage the project yourself.Here's what I'm doing, because I'm converting some spaces in my project and things can get complicated with framing.

16 January 2017 | 2 replies
I'm jealous...Second (check with an attorney, but) I believe that if he lends you money personally and you pay him back, personally, it shouldn't be an issue.It's where he lends to an entity that it will get complicated and need accountability.

17 January 2017 | 8 replies
Since you're just getting 3, I say buy umbrella insurance and skip the LLC - they add a lot of complication to taxes, finances (where you put income, how you pay for things) and I think a good lease and solid insurance will protect you just as well at this stage of the game. 4) How do I decide how long to hold the property?

22 February 2017 | 3 replies
This got somewhat complicated with the new tangible property regulations.

17 January 2017 | 6 replies
This particular case is going to be more complicated than that because the structure that is attached to your residence, so get a CPA to look at it and tell you how that will work.

15 May 2018 | 36 replies
The securities laws are quite complicated though and under the current laws the risk/reward for the platform is poor.

8 June 2016 | 3 replies
Just seems like we over complicate things sometimes by having an LLC for each part of the business.I'm not saying I plan to go this route, but the question was sparked when talking to a non real estate buddy the other day.

6 June 2016 | 3 replies
This is with a 2500 deductible and the insurance uses some kind of complicated (Marshall and Swift) formula to come up to 40% of the replacement value (which gets it to about double what I'm paying for the property).