Real Estate Investors & Developers
Tax Strategy Built for Asset Owners
Real estate is not just another Schedule E.
It is one of the most powerful wealth-building vehicles in the tax code-if structured and reported correctly.
Whether you own a single rental property, manage a growing portfolio, develop multifamily units, or operate through partnerships and S-corporations, your tax strategy must align with how you acquire, finance, and scale assets.
Our firm works with real estate investors, builders, and property owners who want more than basic compliance. We focus on strategy, structure, and long-term positioning.
Common Challenges Real Estate Investors Face
Real estate professionals operate under a completely different set of rules than traditional W-2 earners.
Some of the most common issues we address include:
Passive activity loss limitations
Real estate professional status qualification
Short-term rental classification rules
Depreciation strategy and cost recovery planning
Entity structuring (LLC vs Partnership vs S-Corp)
Capital gains planning and exit strategy
1031 exchanges
Multi-property bookkeeping and allocation accuracy
If these are not handled correctly, investors leave substantial money on the table — or expose themselves to unnecessary audit risk.
Cost Segregation & Accelerated Depreciation
Depreciation is often the single largest tax lever available to real estate investors.
Through proper classification and strategic cost recovery analysis, investors may be able to:
Accelerate depreciation deductions
Improve short-term cash flow
Offset active or portfolio income (when eligible)
Reposition their tax posture during acquisition years
We help determine when a cost segregation study makes sense based on property type, holding period, and long-term objectives.
The goal isn’t just bigger deductions.
The goal is smarter timing.
Loss Limitations & Real Estate Professional Status
Many investors are told their losses are “passive” and simply carried forward indefinitely.
That’s not always the end of the conversation.
With proper planning and documentation, qualifying as a Real Estate Professional under IRS rules can significantly change how losses are treated.
We guide clients through:
Time tracking requirements
Material participation standards
Grouping elections
Risk assessment and documentation structure
This isn’t about pushing boundaries recklessly.
It’s about understanding where the boundaries actually are.
Beyond Compliance: Structuring for Scale
As portfolios grow, structure matters more.
We work with real estate operators to:
Evaluate entity structure efficiency
Plan for refinancing events
Coordinate bookkeeping systems
Align tax strategy with acquisition goals
Prepare for eventual disposition or generational transfer
Tax strategy should support growth, not just report last year’s activity.
Work With a Firm That Understands Asset-Based Wealth
Real estate investing is operational, strategic, and long-term.
Your tax advisor should be too.
If you're building, acquiring, managing, or repositioning property, let’s design a strategy that supports the way you actually operate