
20 February 2018 | 2 replies
What is the tax filing requirements for FLFor 4 and 5 I suspect Ohio will need a non residency filing and the income will be taxed at the state level in Ohio.

21 February 2018 | 8 replies
All though listed as Cash Only deals - you can still use non traditional financing, such as a hard money lender or a private lender.

22 February 2018 | 6 replies
Gloria,Based on the excerpt below from the TN Business Tax Guide (google this for your reference), operators of residential and non-residential buildings other than hotels, motels, or rooming houses are exempt.

21 March 2018 | 32 replies
We generate our own lists through driving for dollars, a public record of properties going into tax sale that you can probably Google for any city, and public records for inherited properties and evictions.

22 February 2018 | 12 replies
I can definitely get those numbers on the coast here, but it would definitely be a push to get that in a non-coastal city.Cash out financing: I would talk to a lender about how easy it is to do a cash out refinance.

23 March 2018 | 3 replies
- refer to the original depreciation schedule but "pause it" so that I pick up depreciaiton as if no years had passed in between rental use (this doesn't sound correct, but it's an opinion I've come across in my research)- start fresh and ignore the previous depreciation schedule, picking the lesser of an adjusted basis (original home purchase value minus land value + improvements) or fair market value minus land valueI have spent several hours looking at IRS publications and searching forums with mixed or no advice.

20 February 2018 | 0 replies
I ve tried to find such lists online in the hopes it would be public information as most things are today, but had no luck.

25 February 2018 | 10 replies
Is he trying to get a non recourse loan or does he not have enough money to qualify?

21 February 2018 | 3 replies
Due to low owner occupancy ratio, I understand this will be a non-warrantable loan.

24 February 2018 | 7 replies
I would of course immediately call that lender directly (if I weren't myself a lender then I'd have my agent make this call; good agents have strong "the lender is throwing spaghetti at the wall" BS detectors) and drill down on how many 100% CLTV commercial loans said lender has done in the last couple years, and ask for property addresses so I (or my agent) could validate from public records (which takes ~5 seconds for a RE agent or lender to look up).