Rental Income Tax

Rental Income Tax: Complete Guide 2026

Updated 2026-03-12

Data Notice: Figures, rates, and statistics cited in this article are based on the most recent available data at time of writing and may reflect projections or prior-year figures. Always verify current numbers with official sources before making financial, medical, or educational decisions.

Rental Income Tax: Complete Guide 2026

Tax information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a licensed tax professional for your specific situation.

Rental income is one of the most common sources of passive income in the United States, with approximately ~11 million individual taxpayers reporting rental income on their federal returns. The IRS taxes rental income as ordinary income, subject to federal rates of approximately ~10% to ~37%, but landlords benefit from a wide array of deductions — depreciation, mortgage interest, repairs, insurance, and property management fees — that can significantly reduce taxable rental income. Additionally, the qualified business income (QBI) deduction, the ~$25,000 active participation allowance, and real estate professional status offer further tax advantages. Understanding how rental income is taxed, what you can deduct, and how to structure your rental activity is essential to maximizing after-tax returns.


Rental Income Tax Rates (2026)

Federal Ordinary Income Tax Brackets (Applied to Net Rental Income)

Filing Status: SingleTax Rate
Up to ~$11,925~10%
~$11,926 to ~$48,475~12%
~$48,476 to ~$103,350~22%
~$103,351 to ~$197,300~24%
~$197,301 to ~$250,525~32%
~$250,526 to ~$626,350~35%
Over ~$626,350~37%

Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)

Threshold (Modified AGI)Additional Tax
Single: above ~$200,000~3.8%
Married filing jointly: above ~$250,000~3.8%

Self-Employment Tax

ActivitySE Tax Applicability
Long-term rentals (passive)Generally NOT subject to SE tax
Short-term rentals (hotel-like services)May be subject to ~15.3% SE tax
Real estate dealers/developersSubject to ~15.3% SE tax

How Rental Income Tax Works

Reporting Rental Income

All rental income must be reported on Schedule E (Supplemental Income and Loss) of your federal tax return. Rental income includes rent payments, advance rent, security deposits you keep, lease cancellation payments, and any property or services received in lieu of rent (valued at fair market value). If you rent a portion of your home, you allocate income and expenses based on the percentage of the home used for rental purposes.

Deductible Expenses

Landlords may deduct ordinary and necessary expenses related to the rental activity, including:

Expense CategoryExamples
Mortgage interestInterest on loans secured by the rental property
Depreciation~$3,636 per year for residential property (straight-line over ~27.5 years)
Repairs and maintenancePlumbing, painting, fixing appliances
Property taxesState and local property taxes on rental property
InsuranceLandlord insurance premiums
Property managementManagement fees (typically ~8%—~10% of rent)
UtilitiesIf paid by landlord
TravelMileage and travel to manage property
Professional servicesLegal, accounting, and tax preparation fees

Depreciation is often the largest non-cash deduction. A residential rental property purchased for approximately ~$300,000 (with approximately ~$60,000 allocated to land, which is not depreciable) would generate approximately $8,727 per year in depreciation deductions ($240,000 divided by ~27.5 years).

Passive Activity Loss Rules

Rental income is generally classified as passive income, which means rental losses can only offset other passive income, not wages or active business income. However, there is an important exception: taxpayers who actively participate in rental activities and have modified AGI of approximately ~$100,000 or less may deduct up to approximately ~$25,000 in rental losses against non-passive income. This allowance phases out between approximately ~$100,000 and ~$150,000 in modified AGI. Above approximately ~$150,000, the allowance is fully eliminated.

Real Estate Professional Status

Taxpayers who qualify as real estate professionals can treat rental income and losses as non-passive, allowing unlimited deduction of rental losses against other income including wages. To qualify, you must spend more than approximately ~750 hours per year in real property trades or businesses AND more than half your total working hours must be in real estate activities. Both spouses cannot aggregate hours; only the qualifying spouse’s hours count. This is one of the most powerful tax strategies available to landlords, but it requires meticulous time-tracking and documentation.

Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction

Rental income may qualify for the Section 199A QBI deduction of up to approximately ~20% of qualified business income. The IRS has provided a safe harbor (Revenue Procedure 2019-38) under which rental activities qualify if the taxpayer maintains separate books and records, performs at least approximately ~250 hours of rental services per year, and meets other requirements. For a landlord with approximately ~$50,000 in net rental income, the QBI deduction could be approximately ~$10,000, reducing the effective tax rate meaningfully.


Comparison: Rental Income vs. Other Investment Income

Income TypeTax RateSE TaxNIITKey Deductions
Rental income (long-term)~10%—~37% ordinaryGenerally no~3.8% if over thresholdDepreciation, mortgage interest, expenses
Dividend income (qualified)~0%—~20%No~3.8% if over thresholdLimited
Interest income~10%—~37% ordinaryNo~3.8% if over thresholdNone
Capital gains (long-term)~0%—~20%No~3.8% if over thresholdBasis only
Short-term rental (Airbnb)~10%—~37% ordinaryPossibly ~15.3%~3.8% if over thresholdSimilar to long-term + platform fees

Tips for Rental Property Owners

  1. Maximize depreciation deductions. Depreciation of approximately ~$3,636 per year per ~$100,000 of building value (over ~27.5 years) is a non-cash deduction that reduces taxable income. Consider a cost segregation study for properties worth approximately ~$500,000 or more to accelerate depreciation.
  2. Track all expenses meticulously. Every deductible dollar reduces your tax liability. Use property management software or a dedicated spreadsheet to categorize expenses throughout the year.
  3. Understand the ~$25,000 active participation allowance. If your modified AGI is below approximately ~$100,000, you can deduct up to ~$25,000 in rental losses against wages and other active income. This phases out completely at approximately ~$150,000.
  4. Consider real estate professional status if you qualify. Converting rental activity from passive to non-passive unlocks unlimited loss deductions, but requires documented proof of approximately ~750+ hours and more than ~50% of your working time in real estate.
  5. Evaluate the QBI deduction eligibility. Meeting the safe harbor requirements (approximately ~250 hours of rental services) can provide a ~20% deduction on net rental income, per federal tax guidelines.
  6. Plan for depreciation recapture at sale. When you sell a rental property, accumulated depreciation is recaptured and taxed at a maximum rate of approximately ~25%, regardless of your ordinary income bracket.
  7. Use a 1031 exchange to defer capital gains. Like-kind exchanges allow you to defer both capital gains tax and depreciation recapture by reinvesting proceeds into another investment property per capital gains rules.

Key Takeaways

  • Rental income is taxed as ordinary income at rates of approximately ~10% to ~37%, but extensive deductions (depreciation, mortgage interest, expenses) often reduce taxable rental income significantly
  • Depreciation on a residential rental property is calculated over approximately ~27.5 years, providing approximately ~$3,636 per year in deductions per ~$100,000 of building value
  • The ~$25,000 active participation loss allowance phases out between approximately ~$100,000 and ~$150,000 in modified AGI
  • Real estate professional status converts rental activity to non-passive, allowing unlimited loss deductions against other income
  • The QBI deduction can reduce effective tax rates by up to approximately ~20% on qualifying rental income
  • Long-term rental income is generally not subject to self-employment tax, but short-term rentals with hotel-like services may be

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