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2 July 2018 | 19 replies
If I buy here I will be tempted to self mange which means I am on call again.I mostly bought foreclosures at a discount.
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21 June 2021 | 6 replies
Many members are experts in their respective fields related to real estate investing, whether that is real estate brokerage, wholesaling, flipping, buy and hold, lending, self-directed IRA and Solo 401k investing, or tax and legal guidance.There are some pretty cool discounts on various products and services offered as Perks to BP members that you might want to check out: https://www.biggerpockets.com/perks/proIf you haven’t checked it out already, the Bigger Pockets blog features links to their awesome podcast and many great articles: https://www.biggerpockets.com/renewsblog/
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18 May 2018 | 2 replies
It's been 2 weeks and the kind of applications we are getting are far from ideal...bad credit scores, delinquencies, hard to figure out how much do they make (meaning self employed in some cases) are some of the issues that made me reject 4 applications so far.My property manager (who helped me buy the house) has posted the ad on all relevant websites, we have priced it at the lower end of the range at which similar homes are listed in the area, but still not happy with the applications.I would be interested to hear what folks, knowledgeable about the Austin market, think...is there more that we can do?
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22 May 2018 | 16 replies
Somewhere in the small print should be words to the effect: "testimonials are sponsored, and may not represent typical results", or some other disclaimer which is then supposed to put the author/s back in the "honest corner". ie.
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19 May 2018 | 3 replies
You're looking at ordinary income rates and, possibly, self employment taxes.
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18 May 2018 | 1 reply
You having a second lien of $200k has no effect on bidding or paying for your bid price.....no, you don’t get credit for it in any way.
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25 May 2018 | 11 replies
i'm looking for the forum's advice on the most efficient/effective way of weeding out properties. i'll be living in the property for at least a year. while i live there, i'll be living in it (so property can't be a complete rehab), fixing or improving the property, and then either flipping or renting out the property. i've looked at about 18 properties the past 3 weekends (i just started 3 weeks ago). the 18 properties were chosen based on 2 broad criteria: 1) based on pictures, description, and google street view, choose properties close to the metra (in illinois), in a location with a great high school (>=8 score), and in nice(r) neighborhood.2) look at zillow for an idea on property values in the neighborhood so that i'm not buying one of the most expensive houses in the neighborhood. if i feel the house i'm looking at is somewhat undervalued because it needs work and there's some room for me to flip, then house passes.this criteria has helped me weed out 100's of properties, but takes me a bit of time.i'm curious, is this a good start or are there other ways that the full time/professional investors use?
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4 April 2019 | 46 replies
Discounted rent to pay by the 5th is effectively an illegal late fee assessed on the 6th.
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19 May 2018 | 1 reply
The problem I ran into with the first bank (and confirmed by the second one who returned my phone call) was “to consider any income from 1099 self employment I would need a tax return for the past two years, and they would average the amount.
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19 May 2018 | 5 replies
I'm neither a lawyer nor an accountant, but I recommend Googling "closely held corporation" and then asking your tax accountant how, if any, the proposed idea might impact your overall tax situation (https://www.irs.gov/faqs/small-business-self-employed-other-business/entities/entities-5: A closely held corporation is subject to additional limitations in the tax treatment of items such as passive activity losses, at-risk rules, and compensation paid to corporate officers.).I've read that when two closely held corporations owned by the same small group of shareholders do business with each other, the IRS sees a red flag because some people try using this approach to evade taxes.From my readings of personal finance articles, this additional scrutiny is based on whether there is an "arms length" between the two parties in a transaction.