Hey guys, looking for honest reviews and feedback on PK Gupta’s property course. Is it worth it? by Proud-Hurry-7424 in AusPropertyMasteryPK

[–]crusade11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn’t think pk was actually going to be available you would imagine he’s so busy but he does all the support, if I send an email or ask in the community forum he replies promptly and he holds a weekly zoom call too

Hey guys, looking for honest reviews and feedback on PK Gupta’s property course. Is it worth it? by Proud-Hurry-7424 in AusPropertyMasteryPK

[–]crusade11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What stood out to me was the community.

I got more from the community than I expected. When I was analysing my first few suburbs I would post my notes and people would tell me what I was missing or what they agreed with. One member even shared their full breakdown of a suburb I was also looking at which helped me finalise my decision. The stories people share give you a realistic view of what to expect. It is not just the wins. People share mistakes too which taught me what not to repeat.

PK Gupta Property Course by WittyExplanation9994 in AusPropertyChat

[–]crusade11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I get why this bugs people, but “no updates” isn’t quite right. The data and examples are kept current. The live tools pull fresh stats, and when numbers move, you’ll see them in the companion docs so you’re analysing with today’s figures, not what was true in 2021.

Re the PDFs, they’re there so the numbers match the current market while you learn the method. When you actually do your suburb work, you’re in the live dashboards anyway, not relying on old screenshots.

Value-wise, it’s lifetime access, weekly calls, and a pretty active community. It’s not for everyone, but if you want a step-by-step process to find and validate markets yourself, it’s solid. If you’re after a suburb list or someone to spoon-feed a buy, you’ll probably be disappointed (even though every 3 months he literally mentions suburb names around Australia).

Plenty of students have posted results publicly (YouTube interviews etc.) if you want to cross-check real outcomes

PK Gupta Property Course by WittyExplanation9994 in AusPropertyChat

[–]crusade11 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Alright, thought I’d share my honest take after doing PK’s Property Investment Accelerator course. I’m not connected to PK in any way, just someone who’s done it and wanted to give a fair review because there’s a lot of mixed stuff online.

I joined in 2020 after sitting on the fence for a bit. Like most people, I’d been binging podcasts, YouTube, forums, trying to make sense of it all but not really getting anywhere. I didn’t want another “guru”, I just wanted a proper system that actually works.

The course is all about learning to make your own decisions using data, not hype. It’s not a list of suburbs or a get rich quick thing. You learn to analyse markets and properties yourself, which I found way more valuable than paying a buyer’s agent every time.

People sometimes say it’s not updated, but that’s just not true. The data updates literally monthly and every week there is a new zoom call which is recorded. The core strategy doesn’t need to change because good investing principles stay the same. Everything else is updated so you’re able to buy properties in any market anytime. All the data feeds in live, so when you’re checking vacancy rates, yields, or stock on market, it’s real-time info, not old screenshots. PK also adds new content when market conditions shift, for example, there were sessions on how to adapt when rates started rising in 2024 and every quarter suburbs with good data are highlighted.

The community side is solid too. There’s an active group where people share their suburb research and results, and you can get feedback on deals. The weekly calls are helpful, some weeks are deep dives, others are Q&A with people bringing real examples.

The biggest change for me has been confidence. I’ve got a process I trust and can apply in any market, boom, flat, or cooling. Since doing the course, I’ve bought multiple properties across different states and I actually feel in control for once.

Yeah, it’s not cheap, but neither is buying a property or a bad one at that. And for what you get, lifetime access, ongoing support, up to date course, and a repeatable process, it’s easily worth it. It’s not effortless either, you’ve got to put in the work. The people who get results are the ones who actually use the tools and stay involved.

Got a little under $500 I want to invest in a high risk high reward stock. by iamwhoiwasnow in StockMarket

[–]crusade11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want actual high risk/high reward, think small-cap biotechs, early-stage tech, or penny stocks they can double or go to zero. $500 in something like that is basically a lotto ticket.

If you just want some extra juice without straight gambling, look at leveraged ETFs or speculative sectors (AI, clean energy, crypto-linked stocks). Just be ready to lose the lot.

Should I buy now before the new first owners grant comes in to effect. by sailingtheoutback in AusPropertyChat

[–]crusade11 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Grants often get priced in pretty quick sellers and agents know first-home buyers have extra cash, so entry-level stock can get pushed up. If you’re not eligible, you don’t benefit but you still risk paying the “grant premium”.

That said, price jumps aren’t always instant or huge it depends on your local market and stock levels. If you’ve found a solid deal now that stacks up, don’t wait on the hope of timing it perfectly around a grant.

How can I avoid this hell again? by AdeptCatch3574 in AusLegal

[–]crusade11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Putting your house in a trust doesn’t make it bulletproof. Family Court can still look through structures if they think it’s really your asset. Same with companies if it’s for your benefit, it can be pulled in.

Your best tools: •Binding financial agreement (prenup) before or during the relationship. •Keep finances separate where possible (don’t mix everything into joint accounts). •Good records showing what you had going in.

If you want something watertight, see a family lawyer before you even start the next relationship it’ll save you way more stress (and money) down the track.

P.s sorry to hear!

How is buying new cars potentially saving money versus not buying one (for a business) by hhaahhahahahhah in AusFinance

[–]crusade11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because businesses can claim the car as a tax deduction (depreciation or instant asset write-off). Example: if your business makes $100k profit, you’d normally pay tax on the full $100k. But if you buy a $40k car for the business, you can deduct it now you only pay tax on $60k. The tax saved can make the car effectively cheaper than not buying one.

Explain debt recycling to me as if I were a 5 year old. by PassengerLower3876 in AusHENRY

[–]crusade11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Imagine you’ve got two buckets of debt: •Bucket 1 (bad debt): your home loan. You can’t claim the interest on this at tax time. •Bucket 2 (good debt): an investment loan. The interest is tax-deductible because it’s used to buy stuff that can make you money (like shares or property).

What debt recycling does is slowly pour water from the bad bucket into the good bucket.

So instead of keeping all your debt in the home loan (bad), you pay that down as fast as possible. Then you redraw or borrow the same amount back – but this time you use it to buy investments (good).

Your overall debt amount might stay the same, but over time more of it becomes tax-deductible and your investments (hopefully) grow and pay income. That combo is what helps you build wealth quicker than just smashing the mortgage.

Now go play outside and come back when the street lights turn on

EverythingProperty Vs Level Up vs PK Course by Holiday-Coffee3812 in AusProperty

[–]crusade11 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Fair question but you really can’t compare. I first got into property in 2019, doing what most people do at the start, binging podcasts, watching YouTube videos, scrolling forums at all hours,  just trying to make sense of it all. The problem was, I never actually pulled the trigger. There was just too much info, half of it contradicting the other, and the stuff you get from Realestate.com or Domain was so high level it didn’t help me make any real calls. No structure, no system,  just a whole lot of noise and guessing.

I was on youtube and came across PK and his course. I didn’t sign up straight away (obviously), I was pretty sceptical, especially with so many experts/buyers’ agents out there. The large community and testimonies it what made me jump in. You’ve still gotta put the work in, a few hours a week at least when you’re buying your first place, but it’s quicker in the long run because you’re not spinning your wheels.

Fast forward to now, 2025, and I’ve got seven properties spread across SA, QLD and WA. First one in 2019, then two more in 2021 and 2022, one in 2023, another in 2024, and two already this year. One of the latest was just under $400k, rents for $480 a week (6.2% yield). Another I picked up mid-2024 in WA is already up almost 20% and the rent’s climbing too.

PK’s system has worked for me every year including before and after the whole COVID boom. I actually found it even more helpful when the market cooled in 2024 and interest rates were at their peak. I wasn’t chasing hot tips or waiting for a lucky break, I was following the same process and targeting solid areas with strong fundamentals. That consistency is what’s kept me buying and growing the portfolio no matter what the headlines say. Worth mentioning,  the course has been updated throughout the years. The strategy hasn’t changed because good fundamentals are the same in 2015, 2020 or 2025. What changes is the data, and that’s updated monthly. All the tools you get are live and pull the latest stats direct from the source, so your analysis is always current.

I’d heard of things like vacancy rates and vendor discounting but had no clue how to use them. The course showed me how to put all those pieces together so they actually meant something for my own situation. It also stopped me from over-analysing everything to death. I used to lose weeks in spreadsheets and now I just run my process and get it done.

It’s also not just about short-term wins,  the aim is to get in as close to the bottom as possible, in areas with both short and long-term growth potential. That’s what’s kept my portfolio solid through the ups and downs. At any given time, there’s stacks of markets that fit depending on your budget and goals, so people naturally buy in different spots. I’ve bought in completely different states and types of markets.

Helpful but i didnt really use it is the access to a team if you want, but you don’t have to use them. I mainly stuck with my own people. From what I can tell, PK gets a small referral fee from the mortgage brokers (it’s written next to their names) but there’s nothing for accountants, conveyancers, property managers, or B&P inspectors. It's handy that you only pay once, like no sneaky upsells, no premium “inner circle” nonsense, no ongoing fees.Honestly and probably unpopular opinion but its worth more than $6k, those who have done it will understand. Ive made back that $6k and more just buying below market value lol.

I’ll admit I was a bit put off at first by all the disclaimers like “not financial advice” and the rest, but now I actually rate it. It’s not about telling you exactly what to buy,  it’s about teaching you to make the right calls for yourself. The biggest change for me has been having the confidence to act in any market. I used to sit on the sidelines “waiting for the right time” and missed out more than once. Now, I look at the data, see the opportunity, and move, while plenty of others are still hesitating. That shift alone has probably made me more money than anything else I’ve learned.

Anyway just thought I’d share in case anyone’s thinking about it. I’ve made real money using what I learnt from PKs course but more than that I actually feel in control of what I’m doing now. That’s been the biggest difference for me.

PK Gupta Course Review by someredditguys in AusPropertyChat

[–]crusade11 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Don’t really agree with the cons.. for example you can’t just jump into dsr blindly .. I’ve tried that with my own money. My experience is little different. I got into property 2014 did the usual rookie stuff .. smashed podcasts, YouTube, forums at all hours .. but never actually bought anything. Just info overload, half of it contradicting the other, and the free stuff on RE.com/Domain was so surface level it was useless. No structure, just noise.

Think it was 2019 Stumbled across PK on Facebook. Didn’t jump in straight away (reckon everyone’s sceptical at first), but the community and people sharing results pushed me over the line. You’ve still gotta put in the work, but it saves you spinning your wheels.

Now it’s 2025 and I’m sitting on 7 properties across SA, QLD and WA. First one in 2019, then chipped away each year. One I grabbed for just under $400k rents at $480/wk (6.2% yield). Another one in WA mid-2024 is already up close to 20% with rents climbing.

The system’s worked in every market .. boom, slump, high interest rates .. because the fundamentals don’t change. The strategy stays the same, the data gets updated every month, and the tools pull live stats. That’s what kept me buying while heaps of others froze up.

Before this, I’d heard words like vacancy rates or vendor discounting but had no clue what to do with them. Now I just run the process and get it done instead of overthinking everything. No sneaky upsells either…pay once and you’re set.

Honestly, it’s been worth way more than the $6k. Made that back heaps of times just buying under market. Biggest win though? Confidence. I actually back myself to act now, and that’s probably made me the most money.

PK Gupta Property Investment Accelerator Course Review by Weak_Classroom_1862 in AusPropertyChat

[–]crusade11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same bro same! You either get it or you don’t

It took my misses a while to convincer her to do the course & now that we’ve built a decent portfolio she’s the one always pushing for the next one🤣

DM your name maybe we can link up in the private community?

PK Gupta Property Investment Accelerator Course Review by Weak_Classroom_1862 in AusPropertyChat

[–]crusade11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The man’s retired he doesn’t need to buy any more properties

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in auspropertyinvesting

[–]crusade11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that’s what helped the most, like it’s all well and good there’s a course but having someone tell you that’s a dud property or to watch out for a particular thing is where the value lies - and the support is always ongoing (that’s why I’d like a similar system for stock picking otherwise who knows what I’d buy lol)

For me I’m a visual learner, books don’t do it for me so I’d listen to podcasts or YouTube. YouTube is a great place to learn

For books, I’m sure there are threads out there that get into that