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Home for the sole purpose of renting

I want to purchase a property for the sole purpose of renting it out. This is the first property but there may be more. Do I still require a standard homeloan mortgage under my name? Do I need to form a legal business entity and put the mortgage under that? What are my options here. by michael389 from Orange County, California. Oct 6th 2010 Reply


Crestico Funding (CresticoFunding)
#316 ranked lender in California - 340 contributions

Michael,It's a Catch 22, as a business stand point it would be great to make it a business but if you form a business (LLC) and try to purchase the property under the LLC, you will have much harder time to get financing, however you can purchase them under your own name and have them placed under business afterward, but you should consult with a Tax and Real Estate Attorney to compare the pros and cons.For more information please feel free to call or email us. Houtan.Hormozian@Crestico.com 949-242-5215

Oct 7th 2010
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Matt Baker NMLS#190779 (MattBaker)
#31 ranked lender in Arizona - 75 contributions

There are quite a few things that I can recommend. Yes I would form a business entity and I have a good business attorney if you need one to help you with that. If you can't pay cash for the properties then you would need a mortgage. Mortgages are a bit different on the Rental/Investment side. You can only finance up to 4 and sometimes up to 10 based on down payment and other investor requirements. If you would like some more detail on the process feel free to call me and I can give you all the information you need. Thanks

Oct 6th 2010
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Rudi Hofmann (CaPortfolioLoans)
#281 ranked lender in California - 380 contributions

I would not suggest starting a separate business entity for this purpose. At least not until you have a portfolio of rental properties.Mortgage loans do not allow as high of loan-to-value. To have 75% of you rental income to count in qualifying income will require 30% down payment. You'll be required to retain a property management firm since you do not have two prior years of property management experience along with have a Rental Income Insurance Policy. Six months of reserves for PITI & HOA, if applicable, is also required. In my opinion, purchase a SFR. Not a Condo or 2 to 4 units. Financing will be easier now and in the future. Also, easier to sell if you decide this isn't for you. Visit my website. There's a lot of information that you will find useful.Best wishes, Rudi

Oct 6th 2010
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