
31 October 2024 | 14 replies
@Russell Brazil in your expert opinion as chief moderation expert, do you think dropping the white couch meme on Columbus threads would get me put in BP jail?

1 November 2024 | 3 replies
But if you have enough room to expand the warehouse portion of the pemb, the topo is level, not hitting on a setback or ROW, an easement, etc…..then why not expand?

20 October 2024 | 1 reply
Hi, I'm working on getting a HELOC on my own personal residence.

21 October 2024 | 9 replies
It helps to focus on attorneys who do real estate.

31 October 2024 | 9 replies
Will hard money lenders typically lend on properties less then 100k?

20 October 2024 | 147 replies
It's online begging.

31 October 2024 | 19 replies
@Ian Ippolito you may want to get on Ian's mailing list he is wicked smart and does very deep dive's into crowd funding and other syndicated investments then writes reviews on them..

19 October 2024 | 2 replies
For example my simple spruce up would be, renno bathroom, and kitchen, paint, and redo carpet upstairs.But if i think real deep into what I could do to make it a STUNNER then I think, knock down walls, create more open/broken floor plan, add central air, possibly do an addition to add a 3rd bedroom and second bath.So when you could do ANYTHING .. how do you draw the line of what you should do?

1 November 2024 | 0 replies
Section 179 of the Internal Revenue Code allows businesses to deduct the full purchase price of qualifying equipment and software up to an annual limit.In 2024, for example, taxpayers can expense up to $1,220,000 of qualified assets.This election can apply to many types of tangible personal property, such as machinery, equipment, and off-the-shelf software, which are used predominantly in your business.Limits on Section 179 ExpensingAs attractive as Section 179 may seem, there are limits.For tax year 2024, the maximum investment limit is set at $3,050,000.If your business places more than this amount in service, the amount you can expense is reduced dollar-for-dollar over this threshold.In addition to the dollar and investment limits, the amount of your Section 179 deduction cannot exceed your taxable business income for the year.This means that even if your business invests heavily in qualified property, the deduction could be limited by the business’s profitability.Also, not all property qualifies for Section 179.Real property, like buildings and structural components, generally does not qualify unless it is "qualified improvement property."