I know someone moving from GA to TN. They are selling their home, and upgrading by about $200k. They are exploring the idea of pulling money out of retirement to cover the delta - effectively paying cash. In order to avoid paying GA state income tax on the money withdrawn from retirement (no tax shelter), could they use a bridge loan until they are technically residents of TN, then withdraw the money and pay it all off? This saves them 5% ($10k) before bridge loan costs. Or is the bridge loan even necessary, just withdraw and claim it as a resident of TN? Or is there another creative financial instrument here that can help? submitted by /u/MSchroedy [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1sz7v7o/avoiding_state_income_tax_ga_tn/
A house up the street caught fire from me, but from what I can tell most of the damage was to the interior and then some cosmetic damage on the outside. It’s clearly not inhabitable as the people that lived there haven’t been back since it caught on fire, but it got me thinking about what happens to houses like that. Is it worth it to completely gut the inside and put in a new interior, or would it be better to sell as-is to a developer that’ll just knock it down and put up a new house? submitted by /u/FloatyFish [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1sz75d8/what_do_you_do_with_homes_that_caught_on_fire_but/