Voters are set to decide whether to increase the tax paid on real estate sales above $1M. Landlords and business groups say referendum violates the state constitution.
Source: Inman News
Chicago landlord, business groups sue to block transfer tax hike
More from AgentMore posts in Agent »
- NAR economist predicts post-shutdown real estate ‘boom’
- RateMyAgent and Curated Social merge to form Renowned platform
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- Crack the code on social media: Now Streaming
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
More from chicago property taxMore posts in chicago property tax »
More from Chicago transfer taxMore posts in Chicago transfer tax »
More from InvestingMore posts in Investing »
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- What’s driving multifamily’s market resurgence?
- Real estate beats Wall Street: How agents become wealth advisors
- Feds bust real estate execs in $25.9M scheme against homeless
- 6 intelligent tech tools every agent-landlord can leverage
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- How to help senior real estate clients right-size with confidence
- Welcome to the Senior Class: Downsizing with a home equity conversion mortgage
- Why independent brokerages matter more than ever amid real estate consolidation
- What is a 50-year mortgage? The pros and cons of Trump’s proposal
More from real estate transfer taxMore posts in real estate transfer tax »
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- HUD shifts homeless policy away from providing permanent housing
- Pulte refers a 4th Democrat, Rep. Eric Swalwell, for mortage fraud
- RateMyAgent and Curated Social merge to form Renowned platform
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
- NAR scores a victory in buyer commission lawsuit
Be First to Comment