Archive for July, 2009
Home for Sale: 3758 17th Ave S, Minneapolis
I recently took on a new single family home listing at 3758 17th Ave S in Minneapolis. It has all the original woodwork, hardwood floors, and built-ins that you come to expect from a turn of the century house in South Minneapolis, but with a recently updated kitchen and bathroom. The mechanicals are in excellent [...]
I recently took on a new single family home listing at 3758 17th Ave S in Minneapolis. It has all the original woodwork, hardwood floors, and built-ins that you come to expect from a turn of the century house in South Minneapolis, but with a recently updated kitchen and bathroom. The mechanicals are in excellent condition.
You can see more about it here. This home is currently listed at $150,000. It is perfect for the investor (as it is rented currently) or for the person looking to put in some sweat equity and make this property shine.
You can contact me for a private showing at 612-281-5419 or use the contact form.
Can any owner of rental real estate qualify as a real estate professional?
Disclaimer: I am not an attorney or tax accountant. This is a summary of information I have learned over the years. You should consult a qualified professional for full information.
So in additional to your regular job/career (which have nothing to do with real estate), maybe you own an investment property or two. Typically these [...]
Disclaimer: I am not an attorney or tax accountant. This is a summary of information I have learned over the years. You should consult a qualified professional for full information.
So in additional to your regular job/career (which have nothing to do with real estate), maybe you own an investment property or two. Typically these investment properties will generate paper/tax losses when factoring in your initial down payments and depreciation. It would be nice to deduct these paper losses against your other income for tax purposes.
Unfortunately, under current tax law, losses from passive activities, which you do not “materially participate” (definition below), cannot be deducted against non-passive income (from your job or business which is your principle source of income). Rental real estate activities are automatically treated as passive activities, even if the owner “materially participates” in the management, operations, leasing, etc.
One exception is that taxpayers can deduct up to $25,000 in losses and credits from passive real estate activities against non-passive income if they “actively participation” in those activities (active participation is a much lower bar than material participation). The exception on the exception is that this does not apply to taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes over $100,000.
What’s “material participation” in an activity?
Material participation in an activity means involvement in the operations of the activity on a regular, continuous, and substantial basis. If a person passes one of the following seven tests, IRS accepts that as establishing material participation in an activity:
- participating in the activity for more than 500 hours in the tax year (the most frequently utilized test);
- participating in the activity if the taxpayer’s participation is substantially all of the participation in that activity by any individuals (including non-owners);
- participating in the activity for more than 100 hours in the tax year, if nobody else (including nonowners) participated more;
- participating significantly in the activity, if participation in all “significant participation” activities for the tax year exceeds 500 hours (but this test isn’t accepted for showing material participation in rental activities);
- having materially participated in the activity during any five of the ten tax years before the year at issue;
- with respect to personal service activities, having materially participated in the activity for any three years (not necessarily consecutive) before the year at issue;
- showing regular, continuous and substantial participation on the basis of all the relevant facts and circumstances, but only if more than 100 hours of participation during the tax year can be shown (and management services aren’t taken into account for purposes of this test unless certain stringent requirements are satisfied).
Why do I want to be a Real Estate Professional?
If you qualify as a “real estate professional,” your rental real estate activities are not automatically treated as passive. Consequently, you will be entitled to deduct losses from that activity against non-passive income. Additionally, the $25,000 deduction cap is removed to all you to deduct an unlimited amount against your non-passive income.
So how do you qualify as a Real Estate Professional?
Here is the summary details:
- You must materially participate in a real estate business (renting and leasing do qualify).
- More than 50% of the personal services you perform in all your businesses during the year must be performed in real estate businesses in which you material participate.
- Your personal services in a material participation real estate business must account to more than 750 hours per year.
- You must own at least 5% of the business that materially participates in the real estate business. In other words, you can’t be the receptionist of large leasing company, work their 40 hours per week and claim material participation (as you don’t own 5% of the company doing that work).
- These tests are applied annually. This means that you may qualify as a real estate professional in some years but not in other years. As a result, the same real estate activity may generate passive losses in some years and non-passive losses in other years.
How do I prove Material Participation?
The extent of an individual’s material participation in an activity may be established by any reasonable means. But the most reliable means of showing material participation consists of keeping appointment books, calendars, daily time reports, logs, or similar documents that provide a detailed account of what yoy did with respect to an activity, when he or she did it, and how much time it took. Failure to document material participation is one of the most common ways of losing the right to treat rental real estate activities as non-passive (and to be in hot water during an IRS audit).
Real Estate Investing 201: Secrets to successfully buying bank owned properties
[ July 28, 2009; 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm. ] Have you lost out on a multiple offer situation on a bank owned? Have you not heard back on offers from Bank? Are you looking for a knowledgeable agent to help you navigate the foreclosure market? Then, this is the seminar for you. Scott Ficek and Brian Peterson will go over strategies that [...]
| July 28, 2009 | ||
| 6:30 pm | to | 8:00 pm |
Have you lost out on a multiple offer situation on a bank owned? Have you not heard back on offers from Bank? Are you looking for a knowledgeable agent to help you navigate the foreclosure market? Then, this is the seminar for you. Scott Ficek and Brian Peterson will go over strategies that help them to continually win homes for their investor clients. The buying process is a little different in this market with sometimes around 50% of homes offered being short sales or bank owned. It is a great advantage to hear from the best when it comes to getting these properties. Among the topics to be discussed will be the multiple offer process, analyzing and pricing, importance of relationships, correct forms, persistence, current market statistics and much more. Bring your questions and desire to learn more about acquiring a nice bank owned investment property.
Register for the seminar by filling out this quick registration form or call 612-281-5419 for more information.
The Future of the Real Estate Market
MaryAlice at MNShortSaleRealtor.com read the 69 page report put out by T2 Partners on the state of the real estate market. She does a great job of giving us a Cliff Notes version with her thoughts added in. Take a closer look at MN Short Sales and MN Foreclosure Sales Will Continue To Rise.
MaryAlice at MNShortSaleRealtor.com read the 69 page report put out by T2 Partners on the state of the real estate market. She does a great job of giving us a Cliff Notes version with her thoughts added in. Take a closer look at MN Short Sales and MN Foreclosure Sales Will Continue To Rise.
Free All Day Investment Property Workshop
[ July 23, 2009; 8:30 am to 4:30 pm. ] This is a FREE all day workshop designed for the new and seasoned investor. This event will feature a full panel of experts in the area of financing, tax, law, 1031 exchanges, financial planning, rental management, insurance and much much more. You will leave this day will real tools to integrate into your investment plan [...]
| July 23, 2009 | ||
| 8:30 am | to | 4:30 pm |
This is a FREE all day workshop designed for the new and seasoned investor. This event will feature a full panel of experts in the area of financing, tax, law, 1031 exchanges, financial planning, rental management, insurance and much much more. You will leave this day will real tools to integrate into your investment plan as well as some excellent professional contacts for your Rolodex. Six hours of real estate continuing education have also been approved.
Featured speakers will be as follows:
Rob Bonahoom Mortgage Coach
Greg Nelson CPA
Jeff Peterson 1031 Specialist
Matt Engel – Attorney
Adam Hartung – Certified Financial Planner
Brent Mohlenhoff – Insurance
Nina Haugen – Rental Management
Bruce Zimmerman – Rent Collection
Peter Fanucci – Credit Lines
Register for the seminar here.
Free Investment Property Seminar
[ July 21, 2009; 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm. ] Have you always thought about buying investment properties? Have you read all the books, bought all the tapes and watched all the infomercials, but still can’t seem to get started with investment real estate? Attend this FREE one and a half hour seminar. There is no charge at all, no contracts you sign with us, [...]
| July 21, 2009 | ||
| 6:30 pm | to | 8:00 pm |
Have you always thought about buying investment properties? Have you read all the books, bought all the tapes and watched all the infomercials, but still can’t seem to get started with investment real estate? Attend this FREE one and a half hour seminar. There is no charge at all, no contracts you sign with us, no consultation fees, no hidden agenda. The seminar simply will be an excellent opportunity for you to learn more about our process and meet a team of investment real estate professionals that can hold your hand through the finding, financing, buying, renting and owning your first investment property.
Let our experience get you started!
Register for the seminar by filling out this quick registration form or call 612-281-5419 for more information.



