I am purchasing a home on Houghton lake MI, and have a few questions.
Am I better off putting it in an LLC or just in my name, and do I need a specific loan or anything to maximize tax potential?
Can I write of remo...
Does anyone have any advice on how to use your primary residence as an investment property?
Is it smart to transfer the house into your LLC? What are the pros and cons?
Hello to this community! First time caller, long time listener.
I’m relatively new to this real estate investment journey. One of my properties seems to now have an issue.
I have a 4 bedroom 3 bath home in an upco...
Hey real estate pioneers,I'm just now starting out with investing and have tons of questions, but for now I'm going to start with one:My Dad and I are partnering together to start our real estate venture and want to k...
I have a question for the everyone. I will need to form an LLC soon as I am approaching the maximum number of mortgages i can get in my personal name. I live in NJ but my properties are out of state. Does anyone ha...
Hi All,
I will be assigning the contract on a wholesale deal.
Purchase Agreement and Unsigned Assigment of contract is emailed to my cash buyer.
In Assignment of contract, the assigment fee will be payable as non-ref...
Hey BP, hope everyone is staying safe during these unprecedented times! I wanted to reach out to the network to see if I can get some help and advice while analyzing a potential subject to deal that my business partne...
If a person (not an investor) paid off someone else's mortgage (cash) to buy a property outright, is a transfer of deed for the property all that is needed? I'm in Texas. It looks on the surface to be that easy. ...
BP Community - I’m looking into creating an LLC for investments across several states. It seems there are benefits to incorporating in Nevada. Looking through the BP posts, there hasn’t been too much lately on Nevada ...
I most likely will be moving a property into an LLC. Most likely the lender will notice the deed change and call the loan. This means I will have to pay it off. I can do that. But I don't want to have that much equity...