
6 February 2025 | 5 replies
At least, if you don't want issues down the road tax wise and if the government finds out it could cause some serious legal issues.

4 February 2025 | 17 replies
We also got them to have it professionally cleaned, ducts cleaned, they threw in some furniture for free, paid a lot of the closing costs that buyer usually pays, paid most recent mill levy instead of prior years taxes, paid my 2.8% commission, etc. because it is a buyers market and that's what you can negotiate in a buyer's market.

2 February 2025 | 7 replies
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4 February 2025 | 2 replies
I understand I wouldn't get the benefit of tax deductions, but what else am I missing that makes this a good deal?

3 February 2025 | 12 replies
At least now your tax basis is $220k ;-) What was the extent of the repairs?

26 February 2025 | 98 replies
Things in your tax filing need to be really off to do this.Being a REP/active participant and using cost seg to offset a spouses (or your own if that's all you do) W-2 wages is fairly common practice.

9 February 2025 | 33 replies
Quote from @Jeff Roth: Hi Lina from Texas-Congratulations on your interest in investing in mid-term rentals and you are wondering how and where to get started.I get this question frequently from investors.Sometimes and investor is looking to keep their property cashflow positive as insurance and taxes have squeezed cashflow by turning units into mid-term or short-term rentals.First off, ideally, the property will cashflow as a long-term rental should something disrupt the mid-term rental model.You will also want to have the property be near where there would be a demand for mid-term rentals (hospitals, universities, research centers).Monthly rents for mid-term rentals are about 20% (+/-) higher than unfurnished similar long-term rentals.There are property managers that will manage mid-term rentals for you and I always advise my clients to use property managers to keep their investment as passive as possible and for compliance issues related to Fair Housing Laws and local regulations.To Your Success!

28 January 2025 | 8 replies
In that case you might save taxes building with them.

29 January 2025 | 8 replies
Hi Steve, where did you get your property tax estimate from?

4 February 2025 | 2 replies
Also, I'm not sure how you're paying attention to it on the tax side, but the unit that you are living in's profit at sale is calculated differently than the other unit that you're renting out.Once you move out, that unit is officially available for rent so from that point forward, any profit gained at future sale will be calculated starting from that point and will be taxable.