Good Financial Reads: Real Estate Strategies and Considerations

2 min read
March 20, 2026

20 Questions to Ask Before Investing in a Real Estate Syndication

By Cynthia Meyer, CFP®, CFA, ChFC®, Real Life Planning LLC

Real estate syndications allow a group of accredited investors to pool their funds into a large real estate project. Syndications combine the financial resources of investors with the real estate expertise of the syndication sponsor. These deals offer the opportunity to reduce an individual’s risk; however, the success of the syndication depends heavily on the quality of its sponsor.

If you’re considering getting into real estate syndications, there are many things you want to know about the syndication sponsor and the deal before making any decisions.

That’s why we’re going to discuss real estate syndications and 20 questions that you should ask yourself before you make any final decisions.

Real estate syndications allow investors to pool their resources to fund a real estate investment. These deals typically are used to fund larger projects (think: large apartment complexes, shopping malls, senior living centers, large student housing complexes, office buildings, etc.) They’re typically structured through a Limited Liability Corporation (LLC) or Limited Liability Partnership (LLP).

 

 

Should I sell or should I rent (out)?

By Britton Gregory, CFP®, Seaborn Financial, LLC

(To those of you who now have the song stuck in your head -- you're welcome!)

Alright -- you've decided to upgrade/downgrade/relocate to a new home, and your financial situation is such that you don't have to sell your current home to do so. So: once you've moved, should you sell your old home, or should you rent it out as an investment property?

I'm a former engineer (insofar as there is such a thing as "former" engineer), so my first instinct is to run some sort of opportunity cost analysis...but I understand that this instinct is not only not universal, it's actually quite rare. So: let's talk about why your instinct might be different, and then talk about how to run the numbers.

Why renting out feels like the safe choice

In our work with clients, we've found that the most common reason that folks instinctively hold onto their old home is simple inertia. Even engineers are prone to this, in the form of "analysis paralysis" ("I don't know what the right answer is, so until I do, I'm going to keep doing what I'm doing") -- in this case, continuing to own the property in question. Of course, like most financial decisions, the longer it takes you to analyze the problem and come up with the expected optimal choice, the higher your opportunity cost, so it's worthwhile to put some thought into it sooner rather than later!

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Should I Use My HELOC as an Emergency Fund?

By Michael Reynolds, CFP®, Elevation Financial LLC

When financial advisors talk about emergency funds, they typically paint a pretty standard picture: three to six months of expenses sitting in a high-yield savings account, ready to access when life throws you a curveball. It's simple, safe, and exactly what most people expect to hear.

But then you look at your home equity line of credit sitting there with a $50,000 or $100,000 credit limit, and a thought crosses your mind: Why am I letting cash earn a little bit of interest in a savings account when I could invest that money (in theory the goal being for more growth) and just tap my HELOC if I need it?

It's a fair question. And honestly, it's one that doesn't have a one-size-fits-all answer.

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