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17 September 2019 | 17 replies
New layouts, moving walls or god forbid an addition...you’ll tear your hair out with SF’s nutty city approvals, and your neighbors will be all in your business if you’re increasing the size of the home.
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12 March 2018 | 3 replies
But others won't be able to afford the rent increase and will either have to find a cheaper and lower quality place, or stay and fall behind and have to be evicted; others will,leave because they are angered.
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11 March 2018 | 6 replies
I always try to pay for what’s in front of me and try to not speculate on rent increase etc. if I do manage to increase rents or pass expenses off to the tenants than that extra money is gravy.
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22 March 2020 | 33 replies
Your CPA might be confusing Bonus depreciation with 179 expense deduction. 179 deduction which was also increased to 100% with the tax reform can only be applied to non-residential property.To clarify, the 100% bonus depreciation applies to property that has a useful life of under 20 years.
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11 March 2018 | 3 replies
Has your business substantially increased or changed due to having it?
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12 March 2018 | 5 replies
On paper, he would be able to make $50,000-$100,000 annually on increase in value of the property he had debt on. in that timeframe, the amount he was making on paper was significantly higher than what people were making on annual salary.With that thought in mind, I would lean towards the content of leverage is King.
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11 March 2018 | 2 replies
I really thought I would be asked to increase my offer if their were other offers.
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17 May 2018 | 5 replies
I wouldn't trade my life for a corporate job even with a 30% pay increase.
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14 March 2018 | 7 replies
This of course assumes that this property was not acquired in a 1031 exchange.However, any costs incurred to acquire your mortgage (if you have one, which it sounds like you do since you got an appraisal) should be amortized over the term of your mortgage.Also, there are some costs on your closing statement that you may be able to expense immediately.Also, it's possible that you incurred some additional costs that increase your basis in the property post-acquisition or possibly even pre-acquisition.You may also have start-up costs that you may deduct up to $5,000 (assuming you don't have in excess of $50,000 of these costs), the excess being amortized over 180 months.Check with your tax professional.
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12 March 2018 | 3 replies
Its value has increased by at least $100k since we bought it, but if we were to sell it and not do a 1031, we'd only get something like $80k back after taxes and commission.