building permits, loans, investors... i believe this is the old way.. the new way will be operating in the private for members only under a PMA( private membership association). AND DAOs decentralized autonomous organization)... when operating in the public with the public we have to follow regulations, but when we are in the private operating with only members and not the public, no regulations, codes, etc would apply to us
Even operating under a PMA doesn’t get around building permits. If you’re using a PMA to raise funds that’s basically a form of crowdfunding, which is also something we cover in detail in the program. I don’t see why you’d limit yourself to one type of funding tool instead of keeping your options open.
@@livingtheoffgriddream I disagree. most amish do not get permits, nor should they. so a pma that is truly in the private is not under the jurisdiction of ANY government whether that be state federal or local. I can prove this by asking you to show me in the constitution where we the people gave the government(when we created government) authority to rule over our private lives. They use "public commerce" as reason to require permits because they assume you are building to sell. we only gave them authority to regulate public commerce and not the private lives or the safety of we the people
@@livingtheoffgriddream Lawyers can only represent a person, they cant represent a man, lawyers can only deal with legal vs illegal, and know nothing of lawful vs unlawful. I can talk to you about it i know everything you need to. more then any lawyer
@@homestead685 that's the same argument my Dad and some other "tax protestors" tried to use before the IRS came and charged them with thousands of dollars of taxes that they had to pay. This is a false argument and you not only should not fall for it-- but please don't mess up other people's lives by pretending this holds legal merit. I wish this were true-- but it absolutely is not.
Great question! Totally depends on what you're doing. We have clients buying land for $40,000 and others buying land for $3.2 million. We have clients wanting to just create a homestead on 10 acres, and others wanting to create 50 family home tinyhome communities; some wanting to create 100 acre permaculture farms, and others a 5 acre high end retreat centre. A big thing to consider is your investor pool. The more money you ask for the harder it is to find someone that can lend that much. We created an investors network where our clients can pair up with potential investors - just good folks that are likeminded and want to be a part of something good. What I see is that the $200,000 mark is a good sweet spot to find an investor for. A lot of people that own a home are able to leverage their equity to pull that much out. But finding a million for example is a lot harder.
@@livingtheoffgriddream thank you for the response. I'm in your course and love all that you've laid out. Thank you for shar8ng your journey and experience with all of us.
I find it's usually relative to land prices. If the economy is up and populations are high, land prices are higher, rental prices are higher. If you're rental prices are lower, land prices are usually lower. And there's always areas that are better though. You also don't need to make $300/night, and that's also just one option I used as an example. We cover about 10 different ways to generate income from the land in our program, and a few ways of using the land to cover it's own purchasing costs or to generate lump sums to retire on. It's not a one size fits all, it's a unique journey for each person and preference.
Perfect timing!!! I was going to start looking for land with & without homes tomorrow in my county. So cool! Thank you so much.
Awesome! You are very welcome! How much land are you looking for? What are your plans for it?
Great video! So informative.
building permits, loans, investors... i believe this is the old way.. the new way will be operating in the private for members only under a PMA( private membership association). AND DAOs decentralized autonomous organization)... when operating in the public with the public we have to follow regulations, but when we are in the private operating with only members and not the public, no regulations, codes, etc would apply to us
Even operating under a PMA doesn’t get around building permits. If you’re using a PMA to raise funds that’s basically a form of crowdfunding, which is also something we cover in detail in the program. I don’t see why you’d limit yourself to one type of funding tool instead of keeping your options open.
@@livingtheoffgriddream I disagree. most amish do not get permits, nor should they. so a pma that is truly in the private is not under the jurisdiction of ANY government whether that be state federal or local. I can prove this by asking you to show me in the constitution where we the people gave the government(when we created government) authority to rule over our private lives. They use "public commerce" as reason to require permits because they assume you are building to sell. we only gave them authority to regulate public commerce and not the private lives or the safety of we the people
Well I’d be interested to learn more about it. Do you have a contact like a lawyer that would be good to talk to about setting something like that up?
@@livingtheoffgriddream Lawyers can only represent a person, they cant represent a man, lawyers can only deal with legal vs illegal, and know nothing of lawful vs unlawful. I can talk to you about it i know everything you need to. more then any lawyer
@@homestead685 that's the same argument my Dad and some other "tax protestors" tried to use before the IRS came and charged them with thousands of dollars of taxes that they had to pay. This is a false argument and you not only should not fall for it-- but please don't mess up other people's lives by pretending this holds legal merit. I wish this were true-- but it absolutely is not.
What is the smallest amount of land to you recommend if someone wanted to do something similar to your first project?
Great question! Totally depends on what you're doing. We have clients buying land for $40,000 and others buying land for $3.2 million. We have clients wanting to just create a homestead on 10 acres, and others wanting to create 50 family home tinyhome communities; some wanting to create 100 acre permaculture farms, and others a 5 acre high end retreat centre. A big thing to consider is your investor pool. The more money you ask for the harder it is to find someone that can lend that much. We created an investors network where our clients can pair up with potential investors - just good folks that are likeminded and want to be a part of something good. What I see is that the $200,000 mark is a good sweet spot to find an investor for. A lot of people that own a home are able to leverage their equity to pull that much out. But finding a million for example is a lot harder.
@@livingtheoffgriddream thank you for the response. I'm in your course and love all that you've laid out. Thank you for shar8ng your journey and experience with all of us.
$300/night for a tent? Holy cow. I don't think this could work in my area...
I find it's usually relative to land prices. If the economy is up and populations are high, land prices are higher, rental prices are higher. If you're rental prices are lower, land prices are usually lower. And there's always areas that are better though. You also don't need to make $300/night, and that's also just one option I used as an example. We cover about 10 different ways to generate income from the land in our program, and a few ways of using the land to cover it's own purchasing costs or to generate lump sums to retire on. It's not a one size fits all, it's a unique journey for each person and preference.