I Just Got a Rental, What Do I Do?: Investors Definitive Guide To Rental Property Taxation And Related Real Estate Investment Considerations - Couverture souple

Watson CPA, Jason

 
9798340755841: I Just Got a Rental, What Do I Do?: Investors Definitive Guide To Rental Property Taxation And Related Real Estate Investment Considerations

L'édition de cet ISBN n'est malheureusement plus disponible.

Synopsis

2026 Update: So… You Bought a Rental Property. Now What?

Congratulations! You’re a real estate investor. Yay! Or at least you own a rental. Same thing, right? Not quite.

Buying a rental property is the easy part. Running it in a way that actually supports cash flow, builds wealth, and creates tax efficiency… yeah, that’s where things get sporty. Stop letting the tax tail wag the wealth-building dog. Learn to prioritize long-term growth while making the tax code work for you.

This book is written by real estate CPAs who have seen it all- the good, the bad, and the “wait… you did what on your tax return?” Don't worry- we're gentle.

Our first book, Taxpayer’s Comprehensive Guide to LLCs and S Corps, has been helping business owners since 2014. This one? It’s for rental property owners and real estate investors who want to stop guessing and start doing things right.

First things first: structure matters. Most investors buy first and ask questions later. We flip that script. Learn how to properly set up LLCs, partnerships, holding companies, holdco vs. propco, and deal structures before your CPA gives you “that look.”

Then we get into the tax nerd stuff (the fun part… for real). We break down:
• Startup expenses vs. acquisition costs (and the REPS and STR carve out)
• Cost segregation study (fully-engineered vs. DIY cost seg)
• Computing average guest stay (harder than you think)
• Bonus depreciation vs. Section 179, and the outlier with partial asset dispositions (say that three times fast)
• Repairs vs. improvements, and rental safe harbors (aka the gray water)
• Renovations vs. placed in service date, and how to use to your advantage with QIP
• 1031 like-kind exchanges… and even 721 exchanges if you’re feeling fancy
• States, and their nexus rules, decoupling and overall insanity (you want to 1031 out of California? good luck)

Now for the good stuff- the strategies. This is where investors separate themselves from landlords:
• Passive activity loss rules (and how to stop them from ruining your day)
• Real Estate Professional Status (REPS)- the holy grail for some
• Short-Term Rental (STR) loophole (yes, it’s real… if you do it right, and just real estate... boats, airplanes and machinery too)
• Having your business rent your short-term rental
• Material participation tests- what time counts, what doesn’t, and more importantly when does the clock start
• How you can check the material participation box with a property manager (easier than you think)
• Vacation home rules and the Bolton Method
• Converting your STR into a second home without raising some eyebrows

Let’s talk deductions. We cover:
• Travel, meals, and vehicle deductions including home office strategies
• How to purchase a car for the rental (and no, a Ferrari is not reasonable but you should still buy one)
• Putting your kids on payroll to pick up pine cones
• Interest tracing (sounds boring, but using your equity to build wealth efficiently)
• Allocating expenses across multiple properties without making a mess

And yes- we talk about the endgame. Because eventually, you’ll sell… or exit… or do something creative:
• Selling your rental property
• Depreciation recapture (the “payback” no one likes)
• Buying out partners without blowing things up

Whether you have one rental or a growing portfolio, our rental book will help you reduce taxes, increase cash flow, and avoid silly mistakes.

Bottom line? You can absolutely build wealth with rental properties. But winging it is not a strategy.

This book is your ultimate rental property ready-guide playbook without the fluff, nonsense, bartender or TikTok tax advice.

Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.