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17 November 2024 | 1 reply
The increased depreciation deductions can offset your taxable income, including gains from the sale of the previous property.
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26 November 2024 | 31 replies
I’d have a better picture by sitting down with someone at a bank, but I did a calculation online and the new loan on cashing out $130k would still be covered by the current rental payment.
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19 November 2024 | 12 replies
STRs require more hands-on management, but it’s a viable option for reducing your taxable income without needing REPS.You might also consider a cost segregation study to accelerate depreciation on the rental, creating larger upfront paper losses.
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22 November 2024 | 8 replies
Since it says you are new to real estate and sharing calculations, my experience is that a lot of new investors are spending a lot of time "modeling" and zero time actually seeing homes or multis or commercial properties in person.
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21 November 2024 | 11 replies
Quote from @Scoop Schneider: 86k principle 7.5IR 360 months 800 credit score 1st position Put it on paperstac. my guess without dropping it into any calculator would be its worth $50-$70k assuming property value is above $100k
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23 November 2024 | 7 replies
Sorry for the following Contrarian advice, but you're not a 5 year old so:The only reason to buy a personal residence (Home) is because someone is forcing you to.Usually, this person is called your Spouse (which is Latin for someone who forces you to make horrible financial decisions then criticizes you for them endlessly:)perhaps DON'T buy a home, just rent something affordable and invest the 20% or in your case 50% into the stock market (sp500 16.1% yearly return last 15 years, 11% last 50 years, 10% last 125 years)remember, your RENT is your maximum monthly housing expense, but your Mortgage is your minimum or starting monthly housing cost, it always goes up from thereI've, owned 2 personal homes, 100% appreciation in 6years on #1 and in 7 years on #2, (I timed our market perfectly both times), with 20% down and very low mortgage rates, but after honestly calculating all expenses, only made about 5-6% a year "investment wise".
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19 November 2024 | 10 replies
However, you could convert the rental property into your primary residence, live there for at least two years, and qualify for the Section 121 exclusion to avoid up to $250K (single) or $500K (married) in capital gains, though depreciation recapture remains taxable.
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17 November 2024 | 7 replies
It means they can help you accelerate the depreciation on the property, which will help you lower your taxable income
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22 November 2024 | 6 replies
To start your first BRRRR investment, define your investment criteria, focus on submarkets with favorable cash flow and rehab costs, build your team, analyze deals using tools like BiggerPockets BRRRR calculator, and start small.
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20 November 2024 | 5 replies
In 2023, gross ROI for flips averaged 27.5%, but net ROI (after all costs) is usually 10-20%, calculated on the total investment (purchase price + repairs).