Julio Gonzalez
11 ways to lower taxes when selling your property
17 November 2024 | 1 reply
The increased depreciation deductions can offset your taxable income, including gains from the sale of the previous property.
Julio Gonzalez
Smart Strategies for Selling Your Investment Property
25 November 2024 | 0 replies
The increased depreciation deductions can offset your taxable income, including gains from the sale of the previous property.
Melanie Baldridge
Power of Bonus Dep.
26 November 2024 | 2 replies
Someone I know bought a ranch to use as a short term rental property in 2021 for $1.7 million.Engineers did a virtual site visit, they were able to assign a value of $347,000 to either 5-7-15 year assets that were eligible for depreciation.In 2021, the bonus depreciation amount that you could take was 100%.This means that the owner could immediately deduct the full amount of eligible property in the year it was placed in service, rather than depreciating it over time.With that in mind, he took the full $347K deduction in his FIRST YEAR of ownership to offset taxable income from rentals.This was roughly ~20% of his purchase price.It was a big win for him.In 2024, the bonus depreciation rate is 60% so the calculation would be different.That said, you can still save and defer a ton.
Bob Dole
Cost Segregation -- What is the true benefit of the accelerated depreciation?
19 November 2024 | 29 replies
A prior cost segregation study increases the depreciation taken during the owner’s lifetime, lowering taxable income each year.
Jorge Abreu
📉Lowering Expenses and Increasing Efficiency
13 November 2024 | 0 replies
The importance of lowering expenses and increasing efficiency to maximize property income.
Bruce Schussler
To cash-out refinance -or- keep positive cash-flow on a rental
21 November 2024 | 1 reply
Quote from @Bruce Schussler: A lot of Podcasts and Youtuber's say to cash-out refinance to keep rents balanced with payment; (PITI) then use those funds strategically to re-invest either in more real estate or just put into a high interest bearing account or money market account...Here's some of my thoughts and comparisons;Cash-out refinance with new loan so rents balance with payment:- The cash-out refinance is 100% tax free- The funds can be put into a money-market account off-setting a portion of the interest charge of loan- The loan balance gets eventually destroyed by inflation- The liquid cash eventually gets destroyed by inflation - The interest on the new loan can be deducted from the rent income- The refinance costs are 3-4% of the total- There is less equity in the property and LLC that can be attached in case of a lawsuit- The break-even on cash-out refinance with current interest costs on the new loan is around 12 years Vs.Paid-off property with positive cash flow:- The positive rent income is 100% taxable minus only depreciation and property tax- There is more equity in the property and LLC that can be attached with a lawsuit- The break even is not until after 12 years at today's interest rates- There is a rate risk in today's inflationary environment where interest rates on bonds keep rising*It appears to me that the cash-out refi is in the best interest for a property investor; (Dave Ramsey would strongly disagree!)
Abdul Aziz Tambadou
High Property Taxes in Detroit 48228 - Seeking Veteran Investor Advice
11 November 2024 | 4 replies
page=LoadVirtualDoc&BookmarkID=6536) that capped annual increases to the Taxable Value of a property to the lower of 5% or Michigan's Cost of Living increase.
Jake Hughes
Cost Segregation Study
17 November 2024 | 7 replies
It means they can help you accelerate the depreciation on the property, which will help you lower your taxable income
Justin Cummings
BRRRR exit strategy or next steps?
20 November 2024 | 14 replies
What you can do to offset this profit is to invest in syndications that do cost segregation studies (which will lower your tax you pay).
Jay Hinrichs
How U.S. can lower housing prices?
20 November 2024 | 45 replies
Lower my cost and I could lower my rent and still make the same profit.