17 November 2025 | 18 replies
One is in my name and 9 are in my and my wife's name.
11 November 2025 | 7 replies
Have heard that some of the "big name" insurance companies (i.e.
21 November 2025 | 4 replies
Quote from @Carson Burkholder: Hello everyone,My name is Carson Burkholder, and I’m a 24-year-old real estate investor and wholesaler with experience in North Florida and Phoenix.
14 November 2025 | 4 replies
They should be able to give you some peace of mind. 800-552-7977I'd search the old owner's name to see why he was escorted off the property.
20 October 2025 | 14 replies
I’ve reached out to over 20 lenders — everything from hard money to business credit lines — and most said “no” until my bankruptcy is discharged or four years past discharge.I’m not looking for personal loans or unsecured business cards — just realistic options for property acquisition or rehab loans where lenders focus on income, deal strength, or collateral value, not just credit history.If you’ve worked with any smaller or more flexible private lenders — even newer companies or individual investors — I’d really appreciate if you could share:Who they are (or at least what type of lender they are)What their approval terms were like (credit requirements, bankruptcy flexibility, etc.)What worked best when approaching them (structure, pitch, documentation, etc.)I know a lot of people in this community have rebuilt after tough seasons — any guidance or names would mean a lot.Thanks in advance for your insight and for helping someone who’s rebuilding the right way.
6 November 2025 | 11 replies
Your best bet is to google it and experiment.
20 November 2025 | 6 replies
They can only claim the §121 exclusion if the property is titled in their personal names or a disregarded single-member LLC, not an S-Corp or multi-member LLC.
20 November 2025 | 19 replies
I'm in the process of creating my LLC in Minnesota and I see LLC owners' names and addresses on the secretary of state website.
11 November 2025 | 4 replies
@Chaim Mal, that’s a great question and one a lot of first-time investors run into.From the tax side, having the property in your name versus an LLC doesn’t really change how you’re taxed.