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2 October 2016 | 1 reply
I was able to look up the property taxes, calculate my mortgage and insurance and some of the monthly expenses.
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13 October 2016 | 4 replies
Generally we zero out income from the C corp as salary to the two shareholders so we don't get double taxed.
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2 October 2016 | 4 replies
That leaves 60% to cover the actual costs of mortgage, taxes, insurance....oh, and you do want to make money on it right?
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8 October 2016 | 3 replies
Currently hold no assets.4) Holding 300K in professional school student loan debt at 6.8%, plan to refinance perhaps at 5%I'm trying to figure out my strategy for avoiding taxes on my high salary/income that will start soon, and hoping to invest aggressively in the next few years in order to set myself up for passive income in the future.
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7 November 2016 | 4 replies
@Joshua Smith, the tax payer has to be the same for the relinquished property and the replacement property.
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2 October 2016 | 3 replies
I was actually wondering who claims the mortgage interest for tax purposes. is it the seller i'm buying from since the loan is still in their name?
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3 October 2016 | 2 replies
This will protect your rentals better and may provide tax advantages.
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11 October 2016 | 25 replies
You get potential cash flow, tax shelter and appreciation.
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7 October 2016 | 5 replies
Income minus $400 for expenses (50% rule) minus $378 (P&I, insurance and taxes) leaves a pitifully small $22 cash flow.
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3 October 2016 | 14 replies
this is something I have done with post-tax monies but am no turning my attention to retirement.so my questions are as follows:1.