All Forum Posts by: Dylan Otte
Dylan Otte has started 2 posts and replied 4 times.
Post: Insurance Coverage Homeowners vs commercial?

- Architect
- MINNEAPOLIS MN / BARCELONA, SPAIN
- Posts 4
- Votes 1
Quote from @Tony Wilcox:
Most carriers don't want to insure a building as a normal rental home if there is a possibility of commercial use, or even if it's set up to possibly be used as commercial even. You will need to look at a commercial policy for this.
Thanks for the response Tony, are you able to recommend any good providers, we are in Minnesota, if that makes a difference?
Post: Insurance Coverage Homeowners vs commercial?

- Architect
- MINNEAPOLIS MN / BARCELONA, SPAIN
- Posts 4
- Votes 1
@Owen Rosen what would make it challenging, because the space is vacant?
Post: Insurance Coverage Homeowners vs commercial?

- Architect
- MINNEAPOLIS MN / BARCELONA, SPAIN
- Posts 4
- Votes 1
The property in question is a mixed-use, with a ground floor commercial unit, and one residential unit upstairs. The property is owner occupied, with no residential renters, and no commercial renters, what type of property insurance is needed here? If we plan to rent to a commercial tenant in the future then should we opt for commercial property insurance now, or just homeowner insurance and then change to commercial once that space is ready to be rented?
Post: Newbie / Gift of Equity

- Architect
- MINNEAPOLIS MN / BARCELONA, SPAIN
- Posts 4
- Votes 1
Hi everyone,
Newbie here to the Bigger Pockets forums, and have a question regarding Gift of Equity.
My parents own a small mixed use building and we are in very early stage conversations about selling it to me for about half its assessed value using a gift of equity as down payment.
My family lives in the building so I'm assuming as long as the purchase prices is $250,000 or less the capital gains tax exemption will apply to my parents, does this even apply if the purchase price is way below the assessed value of the property?
Can gifts of equity be counted towards the lifetime gift exemption so no one will be taxed on that either?
If I buy for $250,000 lets say, and the down payment is $50,000 (paid for with equity), and the remaining equity in the building is $150,000, I get that equity correct? How quickly can I turn around for a cash-out-refi as soon as the deal is complete and title/mortgage are in my name?
Can anyone recommend a Mortgage Specialist in the Minneapolis area that can walk through some of the possible hurdles/outcomes of this type of deal. Thank you!