Book Review: IRA Wealth: Revolutionary IRA Strategies for Real Estate Investment

For my first book review I decided to read Patrick Rice’s “IRA Wealth: Revolutionary IRA Strategies for Real Estate Investment”.   I had heard about the book from some friends and wanted to add it to my RE book collection. 

The begining of the book starts out with 7 Rules that are easy to follow.  Some are common sense but nevertheless it’s good to remember them.   They are:

  1. Set -up Self Directed IRA
  2. Transfer 401k money if possible to it.   
  3. Learn the IRS rules that govern IRA’s
  4. Learn all you can about RE Investments
  5. Do your Homework
  6. Be Prepared to Act
  7. Invest new money into your IRA every year.

I followed them before I knew them all as rules and I’d argue there needs to be 1 more.  Number 8. Use a Roth IRA whenever possible for tax free distributions. 

Rice’s analogy of an investor being the Captain of your own ship really hits home with me.  I can completely identify with that by having my own “Crew” help me navigate the RE Investment waters.  He keeps this theme through out the book and to me that helps make the book easy to read and not become a tired and boring book of IRS regulations.

He describes when to use the different people in your team, which is helpful to remember that it’s easier to do this with the help of others than by yourself.  One Team member I think he may have left out is a good “Note Servicing Company”.  They help collect payments and send it directly to my IRA which makes this more of an automated process.  When a payment is late they tell me.

Rice goes in to some decent details about how you can work with family members while investing the funds of your self directed IRA.  His descriptions of what makes a true Prohibited transaction is very helpful in figuring out who in your family is eligible to invest with.  I think that part of the book is the best explanation I’ve read to date and one of the most useful parts of his book.  The chart is on page 132 fig 7.1.

Another technique that I am actively seeking to use with my next few Note purchases is T-I-C or Tenancy in Common.  On page 71 Rice describes how this could help get bigger deals done by partnering up with others.  With this the partners are in the same Position in the Note but hold a percentage of it based on how much they contributed to buy the Note.  You could then split the cash flow based on the percentage of ownership or in the case of buying a Rental Property on the sale the profit would be split in the % each T-I-C has.   

To me the single most important reason I like this book is that it opened my eyes a little wider.  I have to confess I buy Notes for my Self Directed IRA for the cash flow they provide because I’m building up reserves right now.  However Mr. Rice describes a way for someone to Buy a piece of property for retirement not just cash flow.  You buy a piece of property that you will want in your retirement years, like someplace in Sanibel Island Florida, Jackson Hole Wy, Seattle, WA with your IRA funds.  Rent it out until you retire for the cash flow and then on retirement take the property as a distribution.  Now you have your vacation home paid for and can use it as you like without any worry of prohibited transactions. 

To me understanding this and reading it is worth the price of the book and why I think everyone should get Patrick Rice’s IRA Wealth: Revolutionary IRA Strategies for Real Estate Investment.  Today!

 

One Response to “Book Review: IRA Wealth: Revolutionary IRA Strategies for Real Estate Investment”

  1. Daniel Says:

    I couldn’t understand some parts of this article Book Review: IRA Wealth: Revolutionary IRA Strategies for Real Estate Investment, but I guess I just need to check some more resources regarding this, because it sounds interesting.

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