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85 contributions to Real Estate Note Investors
Hello
Hello everyone, I’m Lucas Johnson, a US-Licensed CPA specializing in tax strategy, compliance, and financial reporting for real estate investors. I work with investors on structuring property income, investor-ready financials, and financing documentation. Glad to connect with this community.
3 likes • Jan 27
@Lucas A Johnson welcome. it's always great to have a tax expert around. are you a CPA who works exclusively with real estate investors? also, out of curiosity, do you personally invest in notes, real property, and etc?
Faith and Finance education
Last Saturday I was talking to our church secretary. There’s a local Christian radio station here that’s talking about people being in debt. We haven’t done a personal finance class at church in quite some time. I would assume that most here, like myself, resonate more with Robert rather than Dave. But when I taught the Dave Ramsey course, the high school students, I did tell them it was fantastic for the middle class to gain knowledge that isn’t typically taught in school. Looking at our members, @Estevan Montoya , I’d love to hear how you’re working in the church with Finance.
7 likes • Jan 27
this is a great discussion... i believe Dave Ramsey is perfect for people that are insolvent and dealing with debt issues. i think John Bogle is great for those that are solvent but haven't done any investing yet (i still have a large portfolio with Vanguard today) Robert Kiyosaki is a great fit for those seeking "passive" income and cutting uncle sam out of the picture (by fully understanding the cashflow quadrant) and then of course we can get more sophisticated (velocity banking, infinite banking, buy-borrow-die, private equity, etc) I'm just shocked schools teach you everything except preparing and filing your own tax returns, which you're required to do for most of your life In retrospect, I'd rather learn that than calculus. in sum, i think there's something for everyone, depending on where they're at with financial literacy. but our education system intentionally prepares you to be a worker/consumer vs an employer/investor.
My New Year's Resolution - Attending Local REI Meetings
I've always prided myself on never making New Year resolutions, but this year, I'm putting it out there - I will attend my local REI meeting at least once a month. I was a part of a local note investor meeting in Orlando, but many of these meetings stopped due to Covid. Now that's behind us, it's time to make some face-to-face connections. If anyone has meetings in your local area, feel free to post them here (unless there's another thread that already has this) and I'll post any meetings I find in the Central Florida area. Happy 2026 everyone!!! 🥂
4 likes • Jan 27
PML for notes? I do PML for my buddies who use the money to acquire properties. but if there's a niche for doing this for notes, I'm all ears and would like to learn more
Distressed Property in California - WWYD?
I had someone approach me recently about their mother's distressed property in Northern California. Both mortgages have been paid off, but taxes are delinquent and the house is in disrepair. She wants to stay in the property, but would willing to sell if the numbers are right. The daughter approached me asking if it's possible to purchase the tax lien at a discount to buy her mother out of the taxes. I've never dealt with tax liens nor distressed property, so as real estate investors such as yourself, what would you do in this situation?
3 likes • Jan 27
i live in the dc metro where MD is a tax lien state and VA is a tax deed state. And as Rob stated, there are more specifics at the county level. might be helpful to look at the statute for the state and then the rules at the county level to see how the game in played in their jurisdiction (... or just use AI to gather the facts 😀) if it's a tax lien situation, they can probably just pay what's due and the lien would go away (that's how it works in MD). if she wants to sell and the property is distressed, she may want to find an investor that specializes in novations.
SDIRA - Early Retirement
I had a meeting with some colleagues earlier in the week where we discussed SDIRAs. After the meeting I got to thinking and have a question that maybe someone from this group may be able to answer. If Early Retirement with notes is your goal, I would think eliminating tax drag would be a huge push in that direction. SDIRA would help greatly with that. However my question is, how do people early retire with a SDIRA when there is an age requirement tied to the account to receive all of the tax benefits? Does anyone have any insights on this?
4 likes • Jan 12
SDIRA is a "future" play, particularly if you're young. For a "present" play, might want to consider other strategies such as buy, borrow, die; infinite banking: or maybe even leveraging real estate and the real estate professional status. there is also a loopholes for short-term rentals some people are using.
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Kareem Aaron
6
1,489points to level up
@kareem-aaron-4449
RE Investor/Agent licensed in MD, VA, & DC. Prefer off-market deals using creative finance. Current interests are Notes & Private Money Lending.

Active 2d ago
Joined Oct 28, 2025
DC Metro
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