Short-term rentals offer unique tax advantages that traditional real estate doesn't. When structured correctly, STR losses can offset W-2 income - something long-term rentals can't do. This guide explains how to maximize these benefits legally.
This guide is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult with a qualified CPA or tax attorney familiar with STR investments before implementing any strategies.
The STR Tax Loophole
The "short-term rental loophole" allows STR losses to offset active income (W-2, business income) when:
- Average guest stay is 7 days or less
- You materially participate in the rental activity (100+ hours AND more than anyone else)
- You don't use a management company for substantially all operations
Why it matters: Long-term rental losses can only offset passive income. STR losses, when structured correctly, can offset your regular income - potentially saving high earners tens of thousands annually.
Depreciation Strategies
Depreciation is a paper loss that reduces taxable income without reducing cash flow:
- Standard depreciation: Building value divided by 27.5 years (residential)
- Bonus depreciation: Accelerate certain assets to 60% in year one (2024)
- Section 179: Immediate deduction for qualifying property
Furniture, appliances, and improvements can be depreciated faster than the building itself. Track all purchases for maximum deductions.
Cost Segregation Studies
A cost segregation study reclassifies portions of your building to shorter depreciation schedules:
- Land improvements: 15 years (landscaping, parking, fencing)
- Personal property: 5-7 years (appliances, furniture, fixtures)
- Building components: 15-39 years (electrical, plumbing, HVAC)
| Purchase Price | Cost Seg Study Cost | Typical Year 1 Deduction |
|---|---|---|
| $300,000 | $3,000-5,000 | $30,000-50,000 |
| $500,000 | $4,000-6,000 | $50,000-80,000 |
| $1,000,000 | $5,000-10,000 | $100,000-160,000 |
When to use: Cost seg makes sense when you have significant income to offset and plan to hold the property long-term. The study pays for itself many times over in most cases.
Maximizing Deductions
Commonly Missed Deductions
- Travel to/from property for management
- Home office (if you manage from home)
- Professional services (CPA, attorney, property manager)
- Software subscriptions (PMS, pricing tools)
- Education (courses, conferences, books)
- Staging and photography costs
- All supplies and consumables
Entity Selection for Tax
- Sole proprietor: Simple, but exposes personal assets and pays self-employment tax
- LLC (taxed as sole prop): Liability protection, pass-through taxation
- LLC (taxed as S-Corp): Can reduce self-employment tax if income is high enough
- Multiple LLCs: Segregate properties for liability and potentially different tax treatment
S-Corp election adds complexity and requires reasonable salary payments. Only consider if STR income exceeds $50,000+ annually and consult a CPA first.
Exit Strategies
- 1031 Exchange: Defer capital gains by exchanging into another investment property
- Installment sale: Spread capital gains over multiple years
- Gifting to heirs: Step-up in basis eliminates capital gains at death
- Convert to primary residence: After 2+ years, partial capital gains exclusion
Work with a CPA who specializes in STR investments. Generic accountants often miss STR-specific opportunities like the material participation rules and cost segregation benefits.
Finding the Right Tax Professional
- Look for CPAs with STR or real estate investor specialization
- Ask about their experience with cost segregation studies
- Verify they understand the STR loophole and material participation
- Consider paying more for specialized expertise - it pays for itself