6 November 2025 | 8 replies
We bought an apartment complex, operated it, improved it, and sold it on terms.
7 November 2025 | 2 replies
Great points, Jeff — and you’re right to highlight that the expense ratios are unusually efficient for a coastal STR.A couple of clarifications on the numbers:The current owner self-manages, which keeps cleaning and maintenance costs lower than a third-party STR manager would typically charge.Some of the repairs and CapEx were front-loaded in prior years (new flooring, appliances, and paint), so last year’s P&L reflects more of a stabilized-operations scenario.The utilities figure is accurate — it’s higher due to being master-metered for the property — but the other OPEX categories are slightly understated if you were to underwrite this as a fully managed, third-party operation.If I modeled it using a professional management assumption plus normalized reserves, the operating ratio trends closer to 48–50%, which aligns with what you mentioned for coastal STR multifamily.I appreciate you calling that out — it’s a great reminder of how much variance there can be between owner-operated and institutional-style expense reporting, especially in hybrid STR assets like this.Here's the owner's profit and loss statement for the exacts of the 2024 year.
28 October 2025 | 11 replies
NOTE: This post is intended for input from CPAs and Tax PROS as I would like to verify some details as have some relevant properties coming to market..I've written about boutique motels/hotels being the next forefront for STR investors and operators.
26 October 2025 | 4 replies
We bought an apartment complex, operated it, improved it, and sold it on terms.
28 October 2025 | 3 replies
This was Sarah’s new oil and gas opportunity following the poor performance of King Operating.
6 November 2025 | 2 replies
That means more of your cash stays in your business, not the IRS’s pocket.For many buyers in this market the ability to offset income and reinvest tax savings is a major advantage — and it strengthens your underwriting.Since STRs have strong appeal (friends & family groups, weekend escapes, high-end amenities) the sooner you position it as a business, the better your financial outcome.Your Step-By-Step Playbook for Cost SegregationHere’s a practical checklist to make cost segregation work for you in an STR:Buy/underwrite with tax strategy in mind: When you evaluate a property, include cost segregation as part of your operating model (not just nightly rate and occupancy).Engage a cost segregation specialist: You’ll want a qualified provider who understands STRs (they’ll allocate assets into proper shorter lives, document everything).Structure operations for “business” treatment: Track participation (guest communication, property maintenance, marketing) to lean into non-passive income treatment.Conduct the study early: Ideally in the year you take service (purchase or major renovation) so you front‐load benefits.Keep detailed records: Invoices, improvement costs, design/furnishing upgrades, hours spent managing.
20 October 2025 | 2 replies
Hey everyone,I’m Gabriel Colón, and for the past seven years I’ve managed and scaled a complete REO operation in Puerto Rico, overseeing every stage from eviction to closing.
15 October 2025 | 3 replies
Is there someone in the southwest Florida area that currently owns and operates a sober living that I could ask some questions?
6 November 2025 | 37 replies
The dashboard will not load, it just spins and spins.
15 October 2025 | 0 replies
Many first-time investors underestimate how much it truly costs to operate a property.