The “benefactors” you’re talking about are the tenants. The owner of the building is an LLC; the owners of the LLC are also the tenants of the building. In this case, the building is a quadplex. There are no additional renters to bring in.
All of the various payments and fees you mentioned? A traditional landlord has all those as well, plus one more: profit. This LLC doesn’t make a profit. Any “profit” it made would come from the tenants, and would be owed back to those same tenants. There is no profit incentive here.
Wait, if the owners of the building are also the tenants of the building, then this is just home ownership with extra steps, which was my very first comment.
I mean, something has to own the building and contract with the tenants, and that something can’t have a profit motive without simply becoming a landlord. So, yes, pretty much.
The “benefactors” you’re talking about are the tenants. The owner of the building is an LLC; the owners of the LLC are also the tenants of the building. In this case, the building is a quadplex. There are no additional renters to bring in.
All of the various payments and fees you mentioned? A traditional landlord has all those as well, plus one more: profit. This LLC doesn’t make a profit. Any “profit” it made would come from the tenants, and would be owed back to those same tenants. There is no profit incentive here.
Wait, if the owners of the building are also the tenants of the building, then this is just home ownership with extra steps, which was my very first comment.
For one, you get the benefit of renting. Which is flexibility.
What is the benefit of renting from yourself?
I mean, something has to own the building and contract with the tenants, and that something can’t have a profit motive without simply becoming a landlord. So, yes, pretty much.