8 January 2019 | 2 replies
If only one person provides the capital but both have membership interests, you will run into gift tax issues.You also want to look at whether a pass-through entity helps your bottom line and your taxes.
9 January 2019 | 2 replies
Basically, in 1996 a married couple out of “love and affection” for the grantee, gifted the property to her “reserving unto themselves a LIFE ESTATE in the herein real estate”.
26 April 2019 | 1 reply
I don't think there is any problem with retaining a life estate, but I would have a tax practitioner that specializes in Estate & Gift issues assist in making the relevant calculations and drafting the supporting documentation.
27 April 2019 | 2 replies
If I understand your post correctly, you will only have to pay for the fix up, not for the house itself (gift from father-in-law)?
28 April 2019 | 5 replies
@Andrew Pettit They can give you a gift you up to $15,000 per year.
16 May 2019 | 15 replies
Would you recommend cards or gifts to stay relevant besides just phone calls?
1 February 2017 | 4 replies
Heck even give them a $10gift card (remember they're tax deductible gifts to clients!)
11 April 2017 | 0 replies
During the process my lender told me that you can not use gifted funds to buy an investment property.
16 April 2017 | 26 replies
Same premise, but you gift your parents the down payment of 50% and she isn't responsible for anything but the taxes and insurance.
31 May 2016 | 0 replies
Right before the summer recess, something magical happened and it was decided the foreclosure language had to pass right now.Never one to look a gift horse in the mouth, I was delighted with the decision and the urgency.