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You Can Deduct Rental Losses by Qualifying as a Real Estate Professional


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Do you manage rental properties on the side? Even if real estate is not your primary profession, you can benefit from tax advantages by qualifying as a real estate professional. Rest assured, your primary employment does not necessarily inhibit your ability to qualify; however, qualification does depend upon how many hours you put into property management versus other employment. You can even gain the same advantages if your spouse qualifies as a real estate professional (if you file taxes jointly).

What Are the Benefits?

Once you are classified as a real estate professional, you are eligible for passive loss tax deductions. These require the government (as your partner) to pay their portion of the taxes. When you have the proper tax advisor helping you to plan accordingly, you have a good chance of getting your IRS partner to provide their portion earlier. This means you’ll have more money free to invest and build your profits with.

As a qualified real estate professional, you can deduct your rental properties’ passive losses immediately, regardless of each property’s income level. If you do not qualify, you may not be able to deduct rental property losses until after the property is sold (unless your joint income is less than $150,000).

How to Qualify as a Real Estate Professional

Qualification depends on your rental property management spending for the course of the year[1]. You or your spouse will qualify if you:

  • Spend greater than 50 percent of your personal service work time participating in real property businesses that you materially take part in or in real property trades; or,
  • Spend greater than 750 hours of your investment analysis and personal service work time participating in real property businesses that you materially take part in or in real property trades.

Here’s an example. Let’s say you work 926 personal service hours throughout the year managing your properties and 920 hours on your W-2 job running your law firm (not including sick days, holidays, or vacations). In this scenario, you would pass both requirements to qualify as a real estate professional. That means you if you materially take part in your rental properties, you may deduct their losses. Just keep in mind that time spent on investment analysis counts toward the hours requirement but not the greater than 50 percent requirement[2]. Also, one spouse must completely meet the requirements. You and your spouse cannot combine your hours together. However, tax law deems that if one spouse qualifies, then both are considered real estate professionals for tax purposes[3].

What Exactly Is “Real Property Businesses or Trades”?

You may have noticed that the requirements hinge on your time spent in real property businesses or real property trades[4]. The terms apply not only to rental properties. In fact, any of the following count toward your service hours:

  • Rental
  • Leasing
  • Conversion
  • Management
  • Operation
  • Brokerage trade or business (including real estate agents)
  • Construction
  • Development
  • Reconstruction
  • Redevelopment
  • Acquisition

Please note: Any work performed as an employee does not count towards the service hours requirement. The exception to this is if you, as an employee, are a five percent owner in the business[5] (i.e., you own more than five percent of your employer’s capital or profits interest, outstanding stock, or outstanding voting stock.

How Do You Prove It?

Now you know what the requirements are, but the IRS obviously requires proof on your part. They will not simply take your word for it that you spent X number of hours working on your business and trades. Fortunately, the IRS has an audit guide for rental properties that lists two proofs an examiner will check for[6]:

  1. You must log the hours spent and services performed during those hours, and provide this documentation when requested. The requirement to track your service hours is discussed in Reg. Section 1.469-5T(f)(4). Acceptable forms of evidence[7] include identification of provided services and approximate hours spent based on narrative summaries, calendars, or appointment books. Just find a way that works for you to track your time and stick to it.
  2. You must provide documentation detailing the amount of time logged in other activities. This allows the examiner to see whether the claimed hours make sense.

To sum things up, you can increase your legal share of government subsidies pertaining to your rental properties. One way is for your total income to be below the threshold. In that case, you can deduct losses up to $25,000. Otherwise, you must qualify as a real estate professional.

  1. IRC Section 469(c)(7)(B).
  2. Reg. Section 1.469-9(b)(4).
  3. IRC Section 469(c)(7)(B)(ii).
  4. IRC Section 469(c)(7)(C).
  5. IRC Section 469(c)(7)(D)(ii).
  6. IRS Passive Activity Loss Audit Technique Guide (ATG), Training 3149-115 (02-2005), pp. 2-5, 2-6.
  7. Ibid., p. 4-7.