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5 February 2020 | 18 replies
It reduces taxable income from the property and if that income becomes negative, it is subtracted from other passive income (other property that may have positive income) or ordinary income (if you make less than $100K or you are a real estate professional) or is carried over to the next year.Once the property is sold, all previous depreciation becomes a subject to recapture - it is added to the income and taxed at a special rate (20% or so - ask your CPA).
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10 February 2020 | 9 replies
In regards to Ben's comments, the main reason why we are only getting 32 units is because of "net worth" limitations since we are working with Freddie Mac to finance 75% of purchase price.I can't afford to owner-operate this property since I run another business that requires 80% of my time and I don't have the time nor the resources to put together a team before closing, therefore I need to find a good PM company that runs this well, even if cash flow is substantially reduced.
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16 February 2020 | 6 replies
Depending on ARV I could take more than the $175k initial investment out but the loan payment would start to reduce my ROI at above $175k.
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4 January 2020 | 4 replies
Gross, otherwise it would be unfair to owners who know what they are doing and how to reduce expenses.
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16 January 2020 | 5 replies
So it makes your rental income tax free- and potentially lets you use that loss to reduce your other income as well.
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5 February 2020 | 11 replies
Unless of course, the sellers are willing to fix it or reduce the price enough for me to fix it.
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7 May 2017 | 6 replies
If that is the case you might have to offer a price for the property that reduces base rent so that tenants can pay cam.Seller will not like all of this but it sounds like their fault for kicking the can down the road and not collecting for 4 years .No legal advice given.
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26 February 2017 | 11 replies
No matter what floor you put down over concrete, it will expand and contract a lot. i had one project recently, i put down a floating floor and left 1/4" space all around, only for it to swell up enough that it buckled and i had to pull the shoe molding off and re cut the floor even more so it could sit back down, that's how much it expanded. if the floor is in a basement make sure it is rated for below grade and can be used on top of concrete.
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8 March 2017 | 8 replies
The VAFF is typically financed in your loan amount at close but there are strategies to remove the VAFF completely upon close if you want to reduce the financial impact of the higher cost of closing that the VAFF causes.Best,
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19 August 2017 | 15 replies
It also reduces my exposure and time investment into each deal.