The IRS classifies rental income as passive activity under IRC 469. Passive losses can only offset passive income - not your W-2 salary or business income. This is why TurboTax shows your rental losses as "suspended."
Three ways to unlock your rental losses:
Defer capital gains taxes indefinitely by reinvesting proceeds from the sale of investment property into a like-kind replacement property.
Can be chained across multiple properties for a lifetime of tax-deferred wealth building. Step-up in basis at death eliminates deferred gain entirely.
Missing the 45-day identification window disqualifies the entire exchange.
All ordinary and necessary expenses for managing, conserving, and maintaining rental property are deductible. This includes property management fees (typically 8–12% of rent), repairs and maintenance, landscaping, snow removal, pest control, cleaning between tenants, locksmith fees, and any other costs directly related to keeping the property in rentable condition.
A landlord paying $4,800/year in property management fees on a $4,000/month rental deducts the full amount, saving $1,440–$1,920 in taxes.
Repairs are immediately deductible; improvements must be depreciated. The line between repair and improvement matters — a new roof is an improvement, patching a roof is a repair.
Deduct the cost of residential rental property over 27.5 years and commercial property over 39 years, creating a non-cash deduction that reduces taxable income every year.
A $300,000 rental property (excluding land) generates $10,909/year in depreciation deductions, saving $3,818/year at a 35% tax rate.
Often overlooked by DIY filers. Depreciation recapture at 25% applies on sale — plan exit strategy with a 1031 exchange or installment sale.
A UNK client came in with three rental properties he had owned for 8 years. His previous CPA had been filing his returns but had never properly calculated depreciation on two of the properties — one had the land value excluded incorrectly, and another had never been depreciated at all. Through a Form 3115 catch-up, Uncle Kam recovered $42,000 in missed depreciation deductions in a single year, generating a $15,540 tax refund.
If you own rental property and have never had a depreciation review, you may be leaving thousands on the table every year. Book a call.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallThe IRS allows you to deduct the cost of a residential rental building (excluding land) over 27.5 years. This creates a non-cash deduction each year — meaning you get a tax write-off without spending any money. A $300,000 building generates $10,909/year in depreciation deductions automatically.
Yes. Depreciation is based on the property's cost basis, not your equity. You can deduct the full depreciation amount regardless of how much you owe on the mortgage.
Depreciation taken during ownership is subject to recapture at a 25% rate when you sell. However, this can be deferred indefinitely using a 1031 exchange, or eliminated entirely if you hold the property until death and your heirs receive a step-up in basis.
You can catch up on all missed depreciation in a single year by filing IRS Form 3115 (Change in Accounting Method). This is a powerful strategy for landlords who have owned property for years without properly tracking depreciation.
No. Land does not wear out and cannot be depreciated. Only the building and improvements are depreciable. Properly allocating the land value (typically using the assessed value ratio from property tax records) is essential to maximizing your depreciation deduction.
Deduct interest paid on mortgages for your primary residence and one second home, up to $750,000 of acquisition debt.
Paying $24,000 in mortgage interest annually saves $8,400 at a 35% tax rate when itemizing.
Compare itemized vs. standard deduction annually. For rental properties, mortgage interest is fully deductible on Schedule E with no dollar limit.
A UNK client had been taking the standard deduction for three years while paying $28,000/year in mortgage interest on a $750,000 Seattle home. After a full deduction review, Uncle Kam found that stacking the mortgage interest deduction with state income taxes ($10,000 SALT cap), charitable contributions ($4,500), and property taxes pushed the itemized total to $42,500 — well above the $29,200 standard deduction for married filers. The client had been overpaying by $9,200/year.
Are you sure you're taking every deduction available to you? A 30-minute strategy call could reveal thousands in missed write-offs.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes, if you itemize deductions. You can deduct interest on up to $750,000 of mortgage debt ($375,000 if married filing separately) on your primary residence and one second home. The deduction only makes sense if your total itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction ($30,000 for married filers in 2026).
Yes. Mortgage interest on a second home (vacation home or investment property used personally) is deductible on the same $750,000 combined limit. If the property is rented out, different rules apply and the deduction is taken on Schedule E.
Add up your mortgage interest, state and local taxes (up to $10,000), charitable contributions, and other itemizable expenses. If the total exceeds $15,750 (single) or $30,000 (married filing jointly) in 2026, itemizing saves you more money.
Only if the loan proceeds were used to buy, build, or substantially improve the home securing the loan. Home equity loans used for other purposes (paying off credit cards, vacations) are not deductible under current law.
Yes. Points paid on a mortgage to purchase your primary residence are generally deductible in the year paid. Points paid on a refinance must be deducted over the life of the loan.
Deduct 100% of the cost of qualifying new or used property in the first year it is placed in service. The OBBBA permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for property with a recovery period of 20 years or less.
A $1M equipment purchase at 100% bonus depreciation generates a $1M Year 1 deduction, saving $370,000 at a 37% rate.
The OBBBA (signed July 4, 2025) permanently reversed the TCJA phase-down schedule. 100% bonus depreciation is now the permanent law for qualifying property. Combine with Section 179 for maximum flexibility.
A UNK client purchased $700,000 in commercial trucks and warehouse equipment for his logistics business. With 100% bonus depreciation permanently restored under the OBBBA, he immediately deducted the full $700,000 — creating a net operating loss that he carried back to offset prior year income. The IRS sent him a refund check for $259,000.
Planning a major equipment or vehicle purchase? 100% bonus depreciation is back permanently. Book a call to plan your purchase strategy.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallBonus depreciation allows businesses to immediately deduct 100% of the cost of qualifying assets in the year of purchase. The OBBBA (signed July 4, 2025) permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for property placed in service after January 19, 2025. It applies to new and used equipment, vehicles, and qualified improvement property.
No. The OBBBA permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for property placed in service after January 19, 2025. The prior phase-down schedule (40% in 2025, 20% in 2026, 0% in 2027) has been eliminated. This is now a permanent feature of the tax code.
Yes — unlike Section 179, bonus depreciation can create or increase a net operating loss (NOL). That NOL can be carried forward to future years to offset future income, or in some cases carried back to prior years for a refund.
Yes. Since 2017, bonus depreciation applies to both new and used qualifying property, as long as the property is new to you (you have not previously used it). This makes it possible to generate large deductions from purchasing used equipment, vehicles, or even existing rental properties.
Yes. You can elect out of bonus depreciation for a specific class of assets (e.g., all 5-year property) if you prefer to depreciate assets over their regular recovery period. This might make sense if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket in future years and want to preserve deductions for when they are worth more.
Deduct ordinary and necessary travel expenses when traveling away from home for business, including transportation, lodging, and 50% of meals.
A business owner spending $15,000/year on travel (flights, hotels, meals) deducts $13,500 (meals at 50%), saving $4,995 at a 37% rate.
For mixed business/personal trips, deduct only the business portion. International trips with more than 25% personal use require proration. Bring family? Only your costs are deductible.
A UNK client attended four industry conferences and made six client visits across the country, spending $22,000 on flights, hotels, and meals. He had been deducting none of it because he was unsure of the rules. Uncle Kam documented each trip: the business purpose, the conferences attended, the clients met. All $22,000 qualified as ordinary and necessary business expenses under IRC §162. At his 37% rate, the deduction saved $8,140.
Traveling for business and not deducting it? Book a call to set up a proper travel documentation system and claim what you're owed.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallYes. An LLC can deduct ordinary and necessary travel expenses including airfare, hotels, rental cars, taxis, and 50% of meals when the travel is primarily for business purposes. The trip must take you away from your tax home overnight, and the primary purpose must be business.
Yes, with limitations. If the primary purpose of the trip is business, you can deduct all transportation costs (flights, rental car) even if you add personal days. However, hotel and meal costs are only deductible for the business days. Document the business purpose of each day carefully.
Deductible business travel expenses include airfare, train or bus tickets, rental cars, taxis and rideshares, hotel accommodations, 50% of meals, tips, laundry, and business calls. The travel must be away from your tax home overnight and primarily for business purposes.
Cruise ship conventions and seminars have a special $2,000/day limit under IRC §274(h). The ship must be a US-flagged vessel, all ports of call must be in the US or its possessions, and the convention must be directly related to your business. Documentation requirements are strict.
Your tax home is the city or general area where your principal place of business is located — not necessarily where you live. Travel expenses are only deductible when you travel away from your tax home. If you work remotely from a home office, your home is your tax home, making most business travel deductible.
Sell cryptocurrency at a loss to offset capital gains from other investments. Unlike stocks, crypto is NOT subject to the wash-sale rule, so you can immediately repurchase the same asset.
An investor with $80,000 in crypto gains and $50,000 in crypto losses nets $30,000 in taxable gains — saving $11,900 at a 23.8% long-term rate vs. paying on the full $80,000.
Harvest losses before December 31. Immediately repurchase to maintain market exposure — no 30-day waiting period required for crypto. Track cost basis meticulously.
A UNK client had $45,000 in unrealized losses across several altcoin positions during a market correction. He also had $60,000 in capital gains from selling Bitcoin earlier in the year. Uncle Kam identified the key advantage: unlike stocks, cryptocurrency is not subject to the wash-sale rule. The client sold the losing positions, harvested $45,000 in losses, and immediately repurchased the same coins — maintaining his full market exposure. The $45,000 in losses offset $45,000 of his gains, reducing his net capital gain to $15,000.
Hold crypto with unrealized losses? You can harvest them today and repurchase immediately. Book a call before year-end to capture your losses.
Be the Next Win — Book a CallNo — as of 2026, the wash-sale rule (which disallows a loss if you repurchase the same security within 30 days) does not apply to cryptocurrency. The IRS classifies crypto as property, not a security, so you can sell crypto at a loss and immediately repurchase the same coin without losing the tax deduction. This may change with future legislation, but for now it is a significant advantage over stock tax-loss harvesting.
The IRS treats cryptocurrency as property. Selling, trading, or spending crypto triggers a capital gain or loss equal to the difference between your cost basis and the sale price. Short-term gains (held less than 1 year) are taxed as ordinary income; long-term gains (held more than 1 year) are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income. Receiving crypto as payment for services is taxed as ordinary income.
Net capital losses (including crypto losses) can offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year. Losses above $3,000 carry forward to future years to offset future capital gains or additional ordinary income. There is no limit on how many years losses can carry forward.
Trading one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., Bitcoin for Ethereum) is a taxable event — you must report the gain or loss on each trade. Using crypto to purchase goods or services is also taxable. Simply holding crypto (HODLing) is not a taxable event. Receiving crypto as a gift is not taxable until you sell it (your basis is the donor's basis or the fair market value on the date of the gift, whichever is lower).
You must track: the date of each acquisition, the cost basis (purchase price plus fees), the date of each sale or exchange, the sale proceeds, and the resulting gain or loss. For large portfolios with many transactions, crypto tax software (CoinTracker, Koinly, TaxBit) can automate this tracking. The IRS requires you to report all crypto transactions, and exchanges are required to issue 1099s for transactions above certain thresholds.
Accelerates depreciation on commercial and residential rental property by reclassifying components into shorter recovery periods (5, 7, or 15 years) instead of 27.5 or 39 years.
A $2M commercial building can generate $200,000–$400,000 in accelerated deductions in Year 1, saving $80,000–$160,000 in taxes at a 40% effective rate.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockQualify as a Real Estate Professional to treat all rental losses as non-passive, allowing unlimited deduction against any income including W-2 wages. Requires 750+ hours per year in real estate activities.
A physician earning $400,000 W-2 whose spouse qualifies as a REPS can deduct $200,000 in rental losses, saving $74,000 in federal taxes.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockEach cryptocurrency trade, swap, or exchange is a taxable event. Proper structuring — holding periods, loss harvesting, and entity selection — can dramatically reduce crypto tax liability.
A trader with $200,000 in short-term crypto gains who restructures to maximize long-term holds and harvests $60,000 in losses saves $37,000 in taxes.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockSpread the recognition of capital gains from a property sale over multiple years by receiving payments in installments, keeping annual income in lower tax brackets.
Selling a property with $600,000 in gains. Spreading over 6 years keeps you in the 15% capital gains bracket instead of 20%, saving $30,000+.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockA self-directed IRA allows investment in alternative assets including real estate, private loans, and businesses — generating tax-deferred (Traditional) or tax-free (Roth) returns.
A Roth self-directed IRA that purchases a $300,000 rental property generating $24,000/year in rent: all rental income and appreciation grow completely tax-free.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockRent your personal home to your business for up to 14 days per year. The rental income is tax-free to you personally, and the business deducts the full rental expense.
Renting your home to your S-Corp for 14 days at $2,000/day = $28,000 tax-free income to you, $28,000 deduction for the business, saving $10,360 in combined taxes.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockSTR properties with average guest stays of 7 days or less are NOT subject to passive activity loss rules, allowing losses to offset active W-2 or business income.
A $600,000 STR property with a cost seg study generates $150,000 in Year 1 deductions, offsetting $150,000 of W-2 income and saving $55,500 at a 37% rate.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockDefer and potentially eliminate capital gains taxes by investing in Qualified Opportunity Zone Funds within 180 days of a capital gain event.
Investing $500,000 of capital gains into a QOF and holding 10 years eliminates all taxes on the new appreciation — potentially $300,000+ in tax-free gains.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockDeduct up to $5.00 per square foot for energy-efficient improvements to commercial buildings, including HVAC, lighting, and building envelope upgrades.
A 50,000 sq ft commercial building with qualifying improvements generates $250,000 in deductions, saving $92,500 at a 37% rate.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockTransfer appreciated assets into a CRT, receive an immediate charitable deduction, avoid capital gains on the sale, and receive income payments for life or a term of years.
Transferring $1M in appreciated stock (basis $100,000) to a CRT eliminates $180,000 in capital gains tax, generates a $300,000+ charitable deduction, and provides lifetime income.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockFounders and investors in qualified small businesses can exclude up to $10 million (or 10× their adjusted basis) in capital gains from federal income tax when selling stock held for more than 5 years.
A founder selling $10M in QSBS stock (basis $100K) excludes the entire $9.9M gain, saving $1.98M in federal capital gains taxes.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockInvest capital gains from any source into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days to defer the gain until December 31, 2026, and eliminate all taxes on appreciation after 10 years.
A $2M capital gain invested in a QOF: defers $400,000 in taxes until 2026. If the fund doubles to $4M in 10 years, the $2M appreciation is completely tax-free.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockDonate a conservation restriction on qualifying land to a land trust, generating a charitable deduction equal to the reduction in property value — often 2–5× the cost of the easement.
A $500,000 easement on land with $2M in conservation value generates a $2M charitable deduction, saving $740,000 at a 37% rate.
Get the complete MERNA strategy notes, IRS red flag warnings, action steps, and implementation guide on a free strategy call.
Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockInvest capital gains into a Qualified Opportunity Fund within 180 days to defer the original gain until 2026 and eliminate all appreciation on the QOZ investment after a 10-year hold.
An investor with $500,000 in capital gains invests in a QOZ fund. The $500K gain is deferred to 2026. If the fund grows to $1.5M, the $1M appreciation is completely tax-free.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockQualified Small Business Stock (QSBS) under Section 1202 allows founders, employees, and investors to exclude up to $10 million (or 10x basis) in capital gains when selling stock held for more than 5 years.
A founder who sells $10M in QSBS stock pays $0 in federal capital gains tax — saving $2,380,000 vs. the 23.8% long-term rate.
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Book A Free Strategy Call to UnlockCost Segregation generates more first-year deductions than any other strategy in the tax code.
REPS status can turn passive losses into unlimited active deductions — but requires 750+ hours documented.
The 1031 exchange can be chained indefinitely — some investors have deferred gains for 30+ years.
This write-off is commonly used by the following taxpayer profiles. Click to see all strategies for your situation.