Tax Deductions for Real Estate Investors
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Tax Deductions for Real Estate Investors
Tax information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a licensed tax professional for your specific situation.
Real estate offers some of the most powerful tax advantages in the tax code. Depreciation, 1031 exchanges, and the ability to deduct mortgage interest, repairs, and operating expenses can significantly reduce — or even eliminate — your tax liability on rental income.
Depreciation: The Most Powerful Real Estate Deduction
Depreciation allows you to deduct the cost of a rental property over its useful life, even though the property may be appreciating in value.
| Property Type | Depreciation Period | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Residential rental | 27.5 years | Straight-line |
| Commercial property | 39 years | Straight-line |
| Land | Not depreciable | N/A |
Example: You purchase a rental property for $300,000. The land is valued at $60,000, so the depreciable basis is $240,000. Annual depreciation: $240,000 / 27.5 = $8,727 per year.
This $8,727 reduces your taxable rental income even though you did not spend any cash on it.
Cost Segregation Studies
For larger properties, a cost segregation study reclassifies components (appliances, carpet, landscaping) into shorter depreciation periods (5, 7, or 15 years instead of 27.5), accelerating deductions. Combined with bonus depreciation (40% in 2026), this can create substantial first-year deductions.
Operating Expense Deductions
| Expense | Deductible? |
|---|---|
| Mortgage interest | Yes |
| Property taxes | Yes |
| Property insurance | Yes |
| Property management fees | Yes |
| HOA dues | Yes |
| Repairs and maintenance | Yes (current year) |
| Advertising for tenants | Yes |
| Utilities (if landlord pays) | Yes |
| Legal and accounting fees | Yes |
| Travel to manage properties | Yes |
| Pest control | Yes |
| Landscaping | Yes |
Repairs vs. Improvements
The distinction matters for tax purposes:
| Repairs (Deductible Now) | Improvements (Depreciated) |
|---|---|
| Fixing a leaky faucet | Adding a new bathroom |
| Patching drywall | Replacing the entire roof |
| Repainting a room | Adding a deck or patio |
| Replacing a broken window | New HVAC system |
| Unclogging drains | Kitchen renovation |
Rule of thumb: Repairs restore the property to its original condition. Improvements add value, extend useful life, or adapt the property to a new use.
1031 Exchange: Tax-Deferred Property Swaps
A 1031 exchange (like-kind exchange) allows you to sell an investment property and reinvest the proceeds into a similar property without paying capital gains tax at the time of sale.
Requirements:
- Both properties must be held for investment or business use (not personal residences)
- You must identify the replacement property within 45 days of selling
- You must close on the replacement property within 180 days
- A qualified intermediary must hold the funds (you cannot touch the money)
- The replacement property must be of equal or greater value to defer all gains
What you defer:
- Federal capital gains tax (up to 20% + 3.8% NIIT)
- Depreciation recapture (25%)
- State capital gains tax
You can perform unlimited 1031 exchanges, deferring gains indefinitely. At death, heirs receive a stepped-up basis, potentially eliminating the deferred gain entirely.
See Capital Gains Tax Guide: Short-Term vs Long-Term Strategies for more on capital gains strategies.
Passive Activity Loss Rules
Rental income is generally classified as passive income, subject to special rules:
The $25,000 Special Allowance
If your AGI is under $100,000, you can deduct up to $25,000 in rental losses against non-passive income (wages, self-employment income). This allowance phases out between $100,000 and $150,000 AGI.
Real Estate Professional Status
If you qualify as a real estate professional (750+ hours per year in real estate activities, and real estate is your primary occupation), rental losses are no longer subject to passive activity limitations. This allows unlimited deduction of rental losses against all income.
Requirements:
- More than 50% of your working hours in real estate trades
- At least 750 hours per year in real estate activities
- Material participation in each rental activity (or elect to group activities)
Additional Deductions and Strategies
Qualified Business Income (QBI) Deduction
Rental income may qualify for the 20% QBI deduction if you meet the safe harbor requirements:
- 250+ hours of rental services per year
- Separate books and records for each rental
- Does not apply to triple-net leases
Home Equity and Mortgage Interest
- Interest on acquisition debt for rental properties is fully deductible (no $750,000 limit that applies to personal residences)
- Points paid at closing are amortized over the loan term
Travel Expenses
- Travel to inspect properties, meet tenants, or manage operations is deductible
- Mileage: 70 cents per mile in 2026
- If you travel specifically for rental activity, lodging and transportation costs are deductible
Entity Structuring
Many real estate investors hold properties in LLCs for liability protection. Tax treatment depends on the entity structure:
- Single-member LLC: Schedule E (same as sole ownership)
- Multi-member LLC: Partnership return (Form 1065)
- S Corp: Less common for rental properties due to self-rental rules
Tax Implications When You Sell
| Tax | Rate | Applies To |
|---|---|---|
| Long-term capital gains | 0%, 15%, or 20% | Gain above adjusted basis (held 1+ year) |
| Depreciation recapture | 25% | Accumulated depreciation claimed |
| Net Investment Income Tax | 3.8% | If MAGI exceeds threshold |
| State capital gains | Varies | Depends on state |
Example: You bought a property for $250,000, claimed $50,000 in depreciation, and sell for $350,000. Your gain is $150,000 — of which $50,000 is taxed at the 25% depreciation recapture rate and $100,000 at your long-term capital gains rate.
Use a 1031 exchange to defer these taxes entirely.
Key Takeaways
- Depreciation is the most powerful real estate tax benefit, allowing you to deduct the property’s cost over 27.5 years without spending cash
- 1031 exchanges let you defer all capital gains and depreciation recapture taxes by reinvesting in like-kind property
- Repairs are deductible in the current year; improvements must be depreciated over time
- The $25,000 passive activity loss allowance lets qualifying investors offset rental losses against other income
- Real estate professional status removes passive activity limitations entirely
- Cost segregation studies can accelerate depreciation and create large deductions in the first year
Next Steps
- Calculate potential gains with the Capital Gains Tax Calculator
- Review the full Capital Gains Tax Guide: Short-Term vs Long-Term Strategies for strategies
- Explore all deductions at Tax Deductions You’re Probably Missing (Itemized vs Standard)
- Small business owner with rental properties? See Small Business Tax Guide: Deductions, Deadlines, and Filing
- Find a real-estate-savvy CPA — Find a CPA Near You