โJan-09-2014 09:49 AM
โJan-11-2014 02:11 PM
โJan-10-2014 03:17 PM
Larryzv7 wrote:
the HOA is another thing that I want to be rid of.
โJan-10-2014 01:37 AM
โJan-09-2014 07:57 PM
โJan-09-2014 04:53 PM
โJan-09-2014 04:19 PM
campigloo wrote:The home is from the 70s. If it cost 100k then, it can easily be worth 600k today. Sell it as your residence, that 500,000 gain is tax free for a couple. Turn it into rental property, that gain may be subject to 20% capital gains tax, 3.8% healthcare passive income tax and state taxes. Also,any depreciation taken is subject to recapture when the property is sold. Depending on an individuals tax brackets at the time, that can cost more than they save. That is an incentive to be very careful.bigdogger wrote:campigloo wrote:Once you do that, you may lose the ability to take advantage of the IRS rule that allows up to a $500,000 per couple gain on your personal residence to be tax free. Make it a rental property, start depreciating and when you go to sell it you could face literally $100,000s in tax liability, especially if they have owned the home since the 70s. Probably bought it for less than $100,000 and it now is probably worth at least 4 or 5 times that. Have a tax and estate specialist go over all the pros and cons.
P.S. Check into putting the house into a LLC. Not only will it legally protect you, you may be able to take depreciation.
Value the house at 100,000 today, take 10 years depreciation, have it valued at 1,000,000 in ten years? Sign me up!
โJan-09-2014 03:52 PM
bigdogger wrote:campigloo wrote:Once you do that, you may lose the ability to take advantage of the IRS rule that allows up to a $500,000 per couple gain on your personal residence to be tax free. Make it a rental property, start depreciating and when you go to sell it you could face literally $100,000s in tax liability, especially if they have owned the home since the 70s. Probably bought it for less than $100,000 and it now is probably worth at least 4 or 5 times that. Have a tax and estate specialist go over all the pros and cons.
P.S. Check into putting the house into a LLC. Not only will it legally protect you, you may be able to take depreciation.
โJan-09-2014 03:06 PM
โJan-09-2014 02:45 PM
โJan-09-2014 02:04 PM
campigloo wrote:Once you do that, you may lose the ability to take advantage of the IRS rule that allows up to a $500,000 per couple gain on your personal residence to be tax free. Make it a rental property, start depreciating and when you go to sell it you could face literally $100,000s in tax liability, especially if they have owned the home since the 70s. Probably bought it for less than $100,000 and it now is probably worth at least 4 or 5 times that. Have a tax and estate specialist go over all the pros and cons.
P.S. Check into putting the house into a LLC. Not only will it legally protect you, you may be able to take depreciation.
โJan-09-2014 01:25 PM
โJan-09-2014 01:17 PM
โJan-09-2014 01:17 PM
โJan-09-2014 01:06 PM
Yaj wrote:
Hello friends!
We want to go full time but don't want to give up the S&B yet.
It's a nice older home (70's) on a lake just North of Milwaukee.
We believe we should be able to get top dollar for a lease so we anticipate attracting a good caliper tenant.
That said we are trying to figure out the best way to market the home for lease. We would like to get the ball rolling A.S.A.P. hopefully by spring or early summer.
The question for any of you that have already done this type of thing is; How did you market the home?
We certainly would like to hear any thing that may help us do this as properly as possible.
I will check this thread often and any thoughts will be immensely appreciated!!!
Barb & Dave O'Keeffe - full-timing since 2006
Figment II
(2002 Alpine 36 MDDS) ๐โJan-09-2014 12:57 PM