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10 May 2017 | 15 replies
However, if you plan on selling after a couple years of cash flowing, the 70-80% the bank will let you refi of the 40K+ in equity along with the equity from debt paydown over the 2 years could provide a nice line of credit for another home.
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1 September 2019 | 100 replies
But yes, in general its yours or someone you know's cash.Yes in the example: 50k house, you buy it with 50k cash, it appraises for 80k, you get 50k cash back out, have a rental that cashflows every month AND have 30k in equity, rinse and repeat
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15 June 2018 | 4 replies
Its conceivable that nothing changed with your tenants, the income stream, or expenses, just one of the 10 members buys out another member for her $50,000 in equity because she is going through a divorce, or some other similar situation.
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30 December 2017 | 25 replies
Each year I hold I gain about 7K in equity and it goes up each year after that (8k, 9k, 10k etc).
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6 March 2018 | 2 replies
In exchange, he is willing to give me 200K in equity and promises to continue to pay PITI.
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7 March 2018 | 13 replies
In other words you paid $35k for $85k in equity...if you don't have any loans on it.Subtract the seller financing from it, and your equity goes down.
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13 June 2018 | 28 replies
However I want to reach financial independence as soon as possible and I don't want to be throwing away my money on rent which is $1k/mo with no gain in equity.
18 October 2017 | 125 replies
I cashed out 50 some thousand in a 401k and put in real estate.Even after taking the 40% hit in taxes/penalties, if you buy with leverage, you can easily turn that into 130k to 150k in equity in 3 or so homes and net income of roughly 500/mo or so (which is tax free for almost a decade when you factor in depreciation).And its going to grow about the same as a 401k too. 3 houses worth 150k apiece that you're all in at 100k or 110k.
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22 April 2021 | 18 replies
Why would I want $1 million in equity in a building I own when I can use that cash to increase my revenue?
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12 January 2016 | 24 replies
Based upon an appraisal of $50,000 and subtracting the principal I owe the bank of $27,500, this leaves $22,500 in equity.