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Show Summary
In this conversation, Brett McCollum interviews Cathi Korelin, an enrolled agent with over 20 years of experience in the tax industry, particularly focusing on real estate investors. Cathi shares her journey into the tax world, the importance of proper bookkeeping, and various tax strategies that can help real estate investors save money. She emphasizes the need for a collaborative team of professionals to navigate the complexities of taxes and offers insights into common mistakes made by investors. Cathi also discusses her upcoming book on creative real estate finance and tax strategies, aiming to educate investors on maximizing their financial outcomes.
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Investor Fuel Show Transcript:
Brett McCollum (00:00.82)
Alright guys, welcome back to the show. Iโm your host Brett McCollum and Iโm here today with Cathi Korelin and today weโre going to be talking about taxes. Before we do, at Investor Fuel we help real estate investors, service providers, and real estate entrepreneurs to 5x their businesses to allow them to build the businesses theyโve always wanted and live the lives theyโve always dreamed of. Without further ado, Cathi, how are you?
Cathi Korelin (00:25.203)
doing pretty good. Thank you. season just ended so the bulk of it is over. It still continues forever of course but hey, bulkโs over so itโs doing good.
Brett McCollum (00:29.144)
Yay!
Brett McCollum (00:35.534)
There you go, yeah. Weโll definitely get into that because Iโm sure thereโs a lot going on there. Before we do, letโs rewind things back a bit, give some history, some context, catch us up to speed. Who is Cathi?
Cathi Korelin (00:49.257)
So name is Cathi Korelin and I am an enrolled agent. That means Iโm actually federally licensed and licensed by the Department of the Treasury. Enrolled agents were actually started back at the end of the Civil War when they were trying to process war claims. The government decided that people were trying to cheat them. And so they created the enrolled agent to help process the claims.
Brett McCollum (01:13.358)
Okay, very cool. And what was life like before taxes? That sort of thing.
Cathi Korelin (01:20.681)
Oh, so Iโve had a few interesting jobs, guess. Well, you know, my when I first started working, I worked in the restaurant world and the Iโm from California and the beach towns that I start off the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk, the little famous only boardwalk on the West Coast. And I had a variety of jobs from there, went to college. I worked in the travel industry for 10 and a half years. I used to book travel for some of the
Brett McCollum (01:35.416)
Wow. Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (01:50.217)
from Nashville, some of them were like, Tim, was it Tim? Whatโs that singer? Faith Hill and yeah. And Reba McIntyre, I used to do some of their travels.
Brett McCollum (01:57.134)
Simitra.
Cathi Korelin (02:03.369)
Kind of fun.
Brett McCollum (02:04.972)
Yeah, thatโs neat. Yeah, and how long are you doing that for?
Cathi Korelin (02:08.905)
10 and half years.
Brett McCollum (02:10.69)
Wow, okay. Thatโs quite a bit of time.
Cathi Korelin (02:12.017)
Yeah, I got stuck going to Hawaii over and over and over again to see hotels. It was really a shame.
Brett McCollum (02:17.454)
Man darn I feel so bad Yeah, honestly though some people do say that The ongoing continuous travel is kind of you know for pun intended here. It is kind of taxing you know Yeah, but so you did that for ten and a half years and then before You know that was before you got into the taxes What kind of led you into the tax world? What was that process like?
Cathi Korelin (02:22.088)
but.
Cathi Korelin (02:45.737)
So I know Iโve numbers, Iโve always been a number person. I donโt want to say can see numbers sometimes, but I work things out in my head and sometimes I count things I donโt even know Iโm counting them. My brain just kind of works that way. Ever since I could remember, we had 13 steps up to our apartment when I was younger and I couldnโt let it stop at a number that was not divisible.
Brett McCollum (03:02.38)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (03:15.271)
by anything but itself and so I had to go back down up steps to make it a more divisible number.
Brett McCollum (03:21.315)
Wow. So thatโs like different. I am not a numbers person. Okay. And that alone is yeah, weโre different people. youโre in the and then what was the so your your whole life youโve been you know, like you said in the in the numbers thing and doing all that what got you hooked like or what was the first step and youโre dipping your toe in the water and
in the taxes arena.
Cathi Korelin (03:54.247)
In the tax arena was always I was wanting to be like a tax attorney growing up. I think that you know have been a lot of things that have happened in my past that. Made me think about law. So like when I was before Iโm from San Iโm from California. We moved to the town I was in when I was about 7 years old. And prior to that my my mom was actually escape a cold.
Brett McCollum (03:58.744)
Okay.
Brett McCollum (04:07.136)
huh.
Brett McCollum (04:24.722)
wow.
Cathi Korelin (04:25.263)
So I think that might have been what kind of got me interested in law.
We were part of the Peopleโs Temple, the Jim Jones debacle about seven years before the big debacle.
Brett McCollum (04:39.358)
wow. Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (04:41.187)
And so I think that that is kind of where I got started being interested in the law. But Iโve always been really kind of a shy person. So I didnโt ever want to be the kind of person who had to go up to court and be talking in front of juries. And since I was good at numbers, taxes always interested me. So that, well, if Iโm a tax attorney, I never have to go to court or anything.
Brett McCollum (05:07.938)
Yeah, so all right, so now how long would you say youโve been in the world of taxes?
Cathi Korelin (05:13.353)
20 years, going on my 20th anniversary. I started off at some of the big box stores and then I worked my way to working for other individuals until I started my own company 10 years ago.
Brett McCollum (05:28.898)
Wow, so 20 years is, I mean, thatโs not a short amount of time. Have you been on your own this whole time, or did you start somewhere else?
Cathi Korelin (05:37.993)
I started one of the, what they call the big box stores, one of the big three. They encouraged me to become an enrolled agent and they helped take care of that, they helped pay for all that. So I was one of the enrolled agents in the area. And the difference between an enrolled agent and a regular tax professional is that weโre licensed by the Department of the Treasury so that we can represent people if theyโre audited.
Brett McCollum (05:41.366)
Okay. Yeah.
Brett McCollum (05:46.019)
Mm-hmm.
Brett McCollum (06:04.15)
Okay. That makes sense, yeah.
Cathi Korelin (06:08.073)
Yeah, so thereโs not, there was not a whole lot, there were not a whole lot of enrolled agents in the district. So there was a limited number of us that could actually represent people.
Brett McCollum (06:14.282)
and you were out of California still this night. Yeah, you were out of California at this point. You were in California at this point still, is that correct?
Cathi Korelin (06:20.201)
Hear me?
Thatโs correct. That is correct. I was actually in California until 2021 when I moved to Missouri.
Brett McCollum (06:31.83)
Okay, weโll brought you out to Missouri.
Cathi Korelin (06:35.049)
There were some life changes that were going on and I was looking for another place to go. California is very expensive and I already had friends that had moved here from California and so I thought well if I moved here it would give me a support group already here so I can and with good friends that were already here so it made it a little easier.
Brett McCollum (06:42.232)
Mm-hmm.
Brett McCollum (06:48.099)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (07:01.609)
Itโs quite a far away. it hadnโt been my friends had been here, they probably would not have been my first choice destination. Itโs quite different from California. Thereโs no beach. I grew up on the beach. I scoop and dive and stuff. So I grew up on the beach.
Brett McCollum (07:07.907)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (07:13.998)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (07:18.051)
Yeah, I will say though, to be honest, like, I amโฆ
My wife and I have talked about this quite a bit. Like, weโre pretty blessed, you know, like, we live in a small, small town right outside of Gainesville, Florida. You know, you wouldnโt think like this is where like, is it but in one direction, our best friends live this way. Another like four minutes, right? And then the other five minutes the other direction, my in-laws live that way across the street, just in another right the neighborhood across the street. Her sister lives there, like our community is surrounding us within five minutes of any direction, you know, and
if youโre gonna move somewhere and you look for like having community and people that you know is everything. and Iโm, that makes a lot of sense now. like, you have like going from California to Missouri, but youโve got, you know, youโve got community, youโve got people. Thatโs really cool. Iโm really excited for you for that. Thatโs really neat. Yeah. Yeah. Letโs.
Cathi Korelin (08:12.329)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (08:15.746)
Letโs talk about taxes a little bit on the high end level, if thatโs OK. So weโve talked kind of offline quite a bit and get to know each other and what you do professionally. I aim not to offend you with this statement, OK? But nobody wants to talk about taxes, right? Weโre real estate investors in this listening audience.
Cathi Korelin (08:19.689)
you
Cathi Korelin (08:31.315)
Thank
Cathi Korelin (08:42.333)
Mm-hmm.
Brett McCollum (08:42.87)
Most of us would rather not talk about it. We know itโs needed. We know we have to have somebody. We know this, but we donโt really want to talk about it. We really want to just make the money. And your job function is in the niche world of real estate. Can you talk a little bit about what it is you do for the real estate community?
Cathi Korelin (08:54.515)
Thatโs right. I know.
Cathi Korelin (09:04.957)
Yes.
Cathi Korelin (09:11.291)
Absolutely. So I have a real estate niche firm. I work with most anybody in the real estate industry landlords flippers wholesalers And What I try to do is not just do their tax return which of course I can do but my job is to help you to Stay compliant. Itโs to help just tax strategy to make sure that youโre paying as little tax as possible
Brett McCollum (09:15.587)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (09:42.651)
I had a guy who was a doctor and he had multiple real estate, he had multiple properties which he was not necessarily renting out. The tax law changes in 2017, tax, Trump tax law changes were a significant hit. He was making $2 million profit after expenses as a sole proprietor, which meant what between federal and state and all the other taxes, he was paying 60%.
Brett McCollum (10:05.079)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (10:12.211)
Thatโs 1.2 million out of $2 million. By the time we finished rearranging his life, we knocked that down by 60%.
Brett McCollum (10:12.933)
wow.
Brett McCollum (10:16.579)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (10:23.255)
man. Yeah, thatโs huge.
Cathi Korelin (10:24.649)
Yeah, he was paying them in. We brought him down, you know, $720,000. Just that means heโll save that every year.
Brett McCollum (10:34.331)
Every year, yeah. And thatโs because why? Why every
Cathi Korelin (10:37.513)
So well, so he had a sole proprietor business, which means that heโs paid the highest amount of taxes. Heโs paying the social security, Medicare, federal, state, everything, which most people do. And what we did was we took it from a sole proprietor to a corporation, because what the tax law changes, the corporation now had a set 21 % tax rate. So.
Brett McCollum (10:56.59)
Mm-hmm.
Brett McCollum (11:03.256)
Wow, okay.
Cathi Korelin (11:04.137)
The highest tax rate then was 39%. So we took him 39 down to 21 right there just by putting him in a corporation. Then we, had five, he owned five properties which he wasnโt doing a whole lot with. One was like in Beverly Hills and there was a big sporting event coming up. You know, we got him out there rental with the Augusta rule where you can rent your property out for 14 days.
Brett McCollum (11:28.888)
Mm-hmm.
Cathi Korelin (11:29.551)
and not pay taxes on it and he can get two or three thousand dollars a night for it with this event coming up. He had family who couldnโt afford to pay fair market rental with a couple of properties. We had him gifting money to family so they could pay fair market rentals so we could turn all the taxes into tax deductible. The tax law changes they were capping the property taxes deduction at ten thousand and he had like over a hundred thousand worth of deductions. So by getting all these
Brett McCollum (11:56.184)
Mm-hmm.
Cathi Korelin (11:57.609)
properties into as rentals. Now he can deduct everything. His wife was his medical biller and we took her out and started her own medical billing company and then hiring the kids and hiring other family members so they had more money coming in. By the time we arranged all this, I mean we cut 60 percent off his tax bill. Then in few years heโll have
Brett McCollum (12:24.609)
I bet.
Cathi Korelin (12:27.017)
more growth and heโll be able to come back and do another round at different income levels or different things we can do to save you money. So once he has more growth, then he can come back and do other things. So right now, weโve got him, who wants to make it $2 million and get to take home $800,000 of it? mean, itโs just ridiculous.
Brett McCollum (12:40.472)
Right.
Brett McCollum (12:51.15)
Yeah. Yeah, you almost have to continue earning more and more just to survive, you know, you know, with tax burden like that, right? Itโs a Yeah, thatโs a man. And it sounds good on paper to say I made $2 million, but you didnโt keep $2 million, you know, and I think thatโs, thatโs the biggest thing. Yeah, and I and itโs so good that you as in your niche, that you understand that world for you know, of the real estate investor.
Cathi Korelin (12:59.934)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (13:08.399)
No, itโs about itโs not what you earn itโs what you keep.
Brett McCollum (13:21.103)
and knowing the laws and the, I wouldnโt call them necessarily loopholes, the loop, the things that you, using the code to its full weight, and to benefit what we do. And it sounds, I love that you do that. What are the biggest, what do you think as the real estate investor, what are the common things that you see that we donโt take advantage of that we should?
Cathi Korelin (13:50.995)
So what I see is a lack of proper bookkeeping. I had somebody we went through and redid three years of bookkeeping and found them $7,000 more in deductions. bookkeeping is not being done properly. A lot of things youโre not taking advantage of are deductions that are not directly related to business necessarily.
Brett McCollum (14:07.628)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (14:17.737)
And so like everybody knows about cost segregation studies. Thatโs a big, thatโs talked about a lot in the industry. So if thatโs not a big surprise, I have a client who sold his business, selling his business. He bought another business. So weโre going to use the cost segregation study on the new business to get rid of the taxes on the one heโs selling. Everybody knows about the, most people are familiar with cost segregation studies. Thatโs like the big thing in the industry. But like,
Brett McCollum (14:24.493)
Right.
Brett McCollum (14:36.94)
Okay.
Brett McCollum (14:43.373)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (14:44.585)
People donโt look at the little things and itโs because they donโt work with their tax professional. And theyโre not necessarily, they add up really fast. Like if youโre going to hire somebody, thereโs a work opportunity tax credit, depending on what type of people you hire, but you have to start the credit before the hiring process. So itโs too late. If youโre contributing to your retirement plan and if you get this on an automated basis, like every month a certain amount.
Brett McCollum (15:05.09)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (15:14.249)
Thereโs actually a tax credit for it.
Brett McCollum (15:16.91)
Huh.
Cathi Korelin (15:17.683)
So if youโre not working closely with your tax professional, your tax strategist, then youโre going to miss all these things that are out there. I look at my clientsโ state taxes. Most people just ignore state tax. They do the federal, the federal number flows over to the state, they just, you know, okay, stateโs done. But I look at the state taxes to see what it is that we can do. In my state,
Brett McCollum (15:27.212)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (15:34.424)
Mm-hmm.
Cathi Korelin (15:47.977)
If you donate to certain charities, 70 per 75 % of that is a state tax credit, which means it comes directly off your taxes. So if you for every $100, $75 is state tax credit, whereas normally with the higher standard deductions nowadays, you canโt most people canโt deduct charity. In my state, if you have
Brett McCollum (16:13.633)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (16:18.279)
You have a first time, thereโs a first time homebuyers account. So if you put money into this homebuyers account for five years, that money is, half of it is tax deductible off your state taxes. And youโre also putting money aside to buy your first home, which is great if youโre looking at buying your first property. If you want to house hack and buy something and live in it, you could buy a duplex or a fourplex and live in it and get the first time.
Brett McCollum (16:21.676)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (16:33.432)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (16:47.177)
home buyer credit, seizure, and all these things, but start with a larger property. If you buy a duplex, you can live in half. The renter is basically paying all the expenses for the duplex.
Brett McCollum (16:52.44)
Right.
Brett McCollum (16:59.758)
Yep. And using the text.
Cathi Korelin (17:01.673)
These are all things that people donโt donโt look at. And so when Iโm looking, when I have a new client, Iโm looking up their state also to see are there credits that we could make you qualify for? A of credits youโre not going to just qualify for off the bat. You have to do something to make yourself qualify for them. And so thatโs what I want to do is say, Hey, what is there in your state that we can make you qualify for without too much effort?
Brett McCollum (17:18.392)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (17:28.751)
I like that. Yeah, itโs not just letโs accept it as low-hanging fruit. You know, letโs find more opportunities. I love that. Youโd mentioned to me kind of off offline a little bit that you were working on and youโre finishing up a book that youโve been writing. Is that correct? What? Yeah, whatโs that? Tell me about that a little bit. I mean, Iโm curious.
Cathi Korelin (17:43.71)
Yes.
Cathi Korelin (17:48.393)
My book is, the working title at the moment is Creative Real Estate Finance and Tax Strategies. So Iโm working with people who work with creative finance, know, seller finance, wraps, innovations, all those things. types of investments are passive and some are non-passive. And there are tax ramifications for how you run your business.
Brett McCollum (17:57.622)
Hmm.
Brett McCollum (18:07.468)
Right.
Brett McCollum (18:17.998)
Okay.
Cathi Korelin (18:18.449)
You know, if youโre a landlord, youโre filing on a schedule E, thereโs no self-employment tax. Does that mean you want turn to a short-term rental with extra services and turn it into a business where you are paying self-employment tax? And so my book is going to talk about the different types of real estate financing thatโs out there, the type of real estate deals, and how they all affect you tax-wise.
You know, should you buy a house in an S corporation? Well, we usually recommend you donโt. There are situations where people will reset depreciation. and Iโm not saying itโs always a good idea, but letโs say you own a home and youโve owned it for a long time, maybe youโve depreciated already, you might sell it to an S corporation. Then the S corporation is going to now depreciate it at the new fair market value.
Brett McCollum (18:49.56)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (19:16.248)
Okay.
Cathi Korelin (19:17.011)
So youโre like getting the depreciation again, but now youโve got an S corporation, which is maybe good, maybe bad. Because if you want to take it out of the corporation, you have to sell it again. So it is not always a good thing, but maybe thereโs a need. So my bookโs gonna talk about what are the tax advantages and what are the bad things about these things? Are you buying something sub two where you areโฆ
Brett McCollum (19:19.831)
Right.
Brett McCollum (19:24.248)
Mmm.
Brett McCollum (19:28.235)
I see, yeah.
Cathi Korelin (19:46.087)
buying it from somebody, not taking ownership, but youโre paying their mortgage. People get confused as to who gets that mortgage interest deduction because itโs not in their name.
Brett McCollum (19:56.226)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (19:57.989)
And so itโs going to cover all these types of things. Opportunity zones, installment sales, buying and trusts. People are using trusts to try to avoid the do on sale clauses.
Brett McCollum (20:03.522)
Yeah, big one.
Brett McCollum (20:09.452)
Mm-hmm
Brett McCollum (20:16.128)
Right.
But if itโs not, even then, if thatโs not set up right, right? Thereโs some, yeah, make sure you have, I will say this, make sure you have a good real estate attorney, guys, if youโre gonna be doing some of this stuff. But keep going, sorry.
Cathi Korelin (20:30.321)
And you know what, your tax professional should be working with your attorney, which should also be working with your financial person who does your life insurance, all that stuff. So you should have a team that works with you. Not just one person, but you should have a team that works together.
Brett McCollum (20:34.844)
yeah.
Brett McCollum (20:51.36)
Yeah. Yeah. thatโs I love that you said that, too. Itโs really important. I think a lot of us, you know, some of us may have like, I send stuff to my I have a tax guy. I have a tax. I have a tax. You know, I have an attorney. But thatโs a good point is they donโt really talk to each other much. You know, theyโre all kind of like my real estate is their own thing over here. My tax person does their thing over here. You know, I have a bookkeeper that does their thing over here and nobody really talks to each other.
Do you find that the folks you worked with that do have that team thatโs kind of working you use and what is there on your side specifically, how do their taxes tend to work out from what youโve seen?
Cathi Korelin (21:35.561)
Well, I think when you start having a team that works with you, youโre going to save more money and be more organized. When I talk to people for the first time, I ask them, what is their net profit? And they have no clue. They always tell me how much their sales are. And I say, what are your expenses? they have no clue. So if youโre working with your tax professional, with your bookkeeper, with your attorney, youโre going to know where you are financially. Having money in the bank,
Brett McCollum (21:54.669)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (22:03.781)
is not an indication of how much money youโve made.
Brett McCollum (22:07.426)
That is so true. Yep, I know that intimately, unfortunately.
Cathi Korelin (22:09.555)
Yes.
Cathi Korelin (22:13.993)
And then to get a surprise tax bill, especially people who are newer in the industry who are just starting to make money, they donโt understand how the self-employment tax works. They donโt understand how the net investment tax works. And so their first year or two in business, they get hit with these big tax bills and it shocks them.
Brett McCollum (22:34.499)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (22:37.203)
in the start-to-cycle.
Brett McCollum (22:37.612)
Yeah. Yeah, what do you,
recommend if somebody were just starting off right and they donโt have their team in place they donโt have their tax you know like letโs say theyโre flipping houses right and so and theyโre they own an LLC because thatโs what they were told to do and that LLC is turning pro and theyโre making you know 40 50 thousand dollars a flip and they thinking theyโre crushing it what do you recommend that they kind of off the top park away for taxes
Cathi Korelin (23:10.185)
The general accepted number is to put 30 % aside for tax. 15 % alone just goes to self-employment tax, so your Social Security and Medicare. And so you could easily be in a 10 or 15 % tax bracket for federal that doesnโt even talk about your state. really that 30%, including state, should be up to 35 to 40%. People donโt realize just how much in tax theyโre paying.
Brett McCollum (23:15.97)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (23:22.584)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (23:36.398)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (23:40.527)
But if we can find a Cathy out there that can find credits for us to offset that, is that correct?
Cathi Korelin (23:47.463)
That, yes, just there are ways to manipulate numbers. Everybody thinks they want to have money into their IRA, their 401K, their Roth, traditional. How all those numbers come and work together. I made $100,000. I paid $3,000 in tax. And most of that was just self-employment tax because I had to pay myself a salary. So I had to take out Social Security Medicare from that.
Brett McCollum (24:10.454)
Right.
Cathi Korelin (24:15.931)
If I made $100,000, Iโd pay no federal or state tax on it because I know how to manipulate the numbers.
Brett McCollum (24:21.528)
Yeah.
Brett McCollum (24:25.078)
Right. Yeah, and thatโs why itโs important.
Cathi Korelin (24:25.545)
And thatโs with nothing in the salary.
Brett McCollum (24:28.11)
Right, and thatโs just really why itโs so important because very easily can you make $100,000 and just like you said, you you take home 55 or 60,000 of that hundred very easily, you know, that happens. And that is not why most of us got into this business is to, you know, pay, you know, 30, 40 % to a tax, you know, burden, you know, and like, and unfortunately I know people that, you know, have missed something on an accident, didnโt really realize it. And then next thing you know,
getting hit with a six figure tax bill that they have no way to pay. And thatโs a very scary situation. So, personally I would recommend people, if youโre listening to this, to go ahead and reach out to a tax professional thatโฆ
Cathi Korelin (25:02.537)
Thank you.
Brett McCollum (25:13.87)
understands the power of real estate, that understands that. And Cathi, Iโm gonna have you in a second here, us where people can connect with you as well. Because with what you do being, with the way your license works, youโre across all 50 states. But I would encourage you guys to get started on that before, even if youโve been flipping for a long time, at least start talking to somebody else right now.
Cathi Korelin (25:39.739)
Even if you canโt, even if you donโt think you can afford someone on a regular basis, like where youโre meeting with them quarterly or monthly, at least sit down once or twice a year with someone and see how things are going because you can always get things on track if you just sit down talk to somebody once or twice to at least see where you are at.
Brett McCollum (25:58.956)
Yeah.
Cathi Korelin (26:04.827)
Itโs much better to have someone like me who youโre meeting with on a monthly or quarterly basis and whoโs on your team. But if you canโt do that right now, meet with somebody. Itโs going to cost you $3.50 to $5.50 an hour, but itโs worth it to get to save so that youโre only not six figures or even so youโre prepared when you owe that six figures.
Brett McCollum (26:34.498)
Yeah, I think that preparation is everything of knowing what to expect. I think thatโs most peopleโs problems. They donโt know what to expect. And then when it happens, theyโre like, my gosh. Instead of being, theyโre reactionary. Instead of being responsive, theyโre reactive and then getting themselves into mistakes. But if, Cathy, if people do want to connect with you though, what do think the best way for that is to happen?
Cathi Korelin (26:59.849)
And I am accessible by phone or email pretty easily. And my email is Cathi with an I, C-U-T-H-I, at EliteTaxInc.com.
And my phone number is 5 7 3 7 9 7 9 9 7 7. I made nice little round numbers to repeat.
Brett McCollum (27:21.763)
There you go.
Yeah, I will make sure we get them to the show notes as well. Right. So, guys, and seriously, if youโre in a situation where now youโre in a situation, if youโre in real estate and you donโt have somebody like looking for looking out for you on your taxes, reach out. know I, Cathi and I, weโve talked quite a bit at this point. I know sheโs absolutely willing to go above and beyond to help you guys to get you on track to, you know, to do the, you know, get you set up. But yeah, Cathi, this is
Thanks for sharing your wisdom, your knowledge. When do you anticipate your book maybe being able to come out?
Cathi Korelin (27:58.769)
Iโm hoping in the next couple weeks. Iโve got pretty much mostly written. Just need to do a few more tweaks, maybe combine a couple of chapters and maybe just get it proofread. And then hopefully next couple weeks.
Brett McCollum (28:14.478)
Yeah, yeah, I mean, because that education is that education is so needed in our in our in our space. So I look forward to seeing that when it comes out to you. You know, again, thanks for being here with us. I appreciate you taking your time sharing your wisdom, your knowledge, and I hope our audience takes a lot away from this.
Cathi Korelin (28:23.763)
Thank you.
Cathi Korelin (28:33.459)
Thank you very much. I hope so, I hope so too.
Brett McCollum (28:36.749)
Yeah. And guys, thank you as well for hanging out with us. I appreciate you spending time and listening, and we will see each of you on the next episode. Take care, everybody.