San Diego Tax Blog

San Diego Tax Blog

Monday, September 28, 2015

Are Real Estate Professional Affected by the Passive Loss Rules?

Over the past few blog posts we have been discussing what passive activities are, and how they can affect your taxes. Specifically, we discussed how all real estate investments are automatically considered to be passive activities, and that passive activity losses cannot be deducted against ordinary income. Instead, passive activity losses can only be used to offset passive activity income (which is taxed like ordinary income). We also discussed that certain investors who actively participate in the real estate activity are allowed to deduct up to $25,000 of losses as a special allowance, but that the special allowance begins to phase out if the investor has more than $100,000 of income from all sources. But what about real estate professionals? Real estate professionals are not simply investors who may own one or two rental properties, they spend most of their time involved in real estate and their income is typically very dependent on their real estate activities. Are real estate professionals limited to the same $25,000 special allowance that other real estate investors are limited to?

No, the Internal Revenue Code specifies that real estate professionals are exempt from the passive activity rules (for their real estate investments).

Who is a Real Estate Professional?

There are two requirements that must be met in order to qualify as a real estate professional for tax purposes:

1) More than one half (1/2) of the personal services you perform in all trades or businesses must be performed in real estate trades or businesses in which you materially participate (see the material participation rules here). The purpose of this rule is to ensure that only people who spend more time with real estate than other trades or businesses qualify.

2) You must perform more than 750 hours of services during the year in real estate trades or businesses in which you materially participate. This rule prevents casual investors who are not involved in other trades or businesses from claiming to be real estate professionals.

To be clear, there are a number of real estate activities that can qualify- it is not simply limited to rental activities. The Internal Revenue Code specifically lists the following activities that qualify as a real estate trade or business:
  • Real property development;
  • Redevelopment;
  • Construction;
  • Reconstruction;
  • Acquisition;
  • Conversion;
  • Rental;
  • Operation;
  • Management;
  • Leasing; and
  • Brokerage.

Therefore, if you are a real estate professional, the passive activity rules do not apply to your real estate activities.  You are entitled to deduct those any losses from those activities against your ordinary income.

If you have questions about whether you qualify as a real estate professional, how the passive activity rules operate, or any other tax question please send me an e-mail.

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