micmaher99

micmaher99 t1_jdaty9n wrote

Pool at Harrah's on a Saturday is 80° inside and a good spot to chill all day in the winter/spring. Go down Friday, nice dinner, drink and pool all day Saturday, then dinner and casino.

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micmaher99 t1_jarln93 wrote

Yea, taxes are going up. They've been telling everyone for years taxes are going up. Budget for another $1k-$2k a year in property taxes for another year or two.

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micmaher99 t1_jaeb04j wrote

The state wanting to hand out money and the amount of bending over backwards they've had to do to get people to sign up is very odd to me. There's got to be a better way to implement this system.

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micmaher99 t1_jacgviq wrote

>OP is in residential real estate, not commercial real estate

OP has owned "rentals for decades.". Based on that, plus the fact JC is asking OP for property financials, I'm assuming OP doesn't just own a random condo or two.

4 unit multifamily is really where banks and the industry make the switch in talking about "residential" vs "commercial", but with multi-million dollar companies buying up single family homes to rent them out, that line has gotten blurry. It's really a difference without a distinction for OP.

The city wants accounting info to sharpen their income approach value to ensure the property tax assessment is correct. Yes, real estate that is rented for income pays property taxes, even though the landlord gets taxed on that income.

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micmaher99 t1_ja9cl6a wrote

Cash flow is the main determination of market value for most commercial real estate. For 4 unit multifamily and smaller properties, you usually do a sales approach and an income approach. For single family homes or condos, you do a sales comparison approach, but that reflects that some people will buy these and rent them out.

Cash flow is 100% a great indication of market value.

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micmaher99 t1_ja3z4ec wrote

Short answer is no.

If your property value declines, your taxes might go down. But you don't really want that if you're an owner. If you're over assessed, your taxes might go down if you appeal or in a reval. But for budgeting purposes, expect it to increase 2-3% a year in most of NJ. In JC I'd expect it to go up like $1000/year each year for another year or two, then go back to steady growth.

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micmaher99 t1_j4ydmz0 wrote

"Similar New York-bound traffic closures that began in April 2020 will end at 5 a.m. on Feb. 4 as the PANYNJ completes repairs and storm resiliency projects related to Sandy damage in the tunnels’ south tube."

This really isn't that big of a deal, how many ppl even know the other tube has been closed at nights for 3 years?

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