Real Estate Tax Changes You Need to Know

By Brian Wheeler

We’ve been taking on more clients with similar questions about the latest real-estate tax changes.So here’s a simple breakdown of what matters right now, and what you should be thinking about before you make any moves.

person-on-the-coputer-looking-at-real-estate-taxes

1. 1031 Exchange Tightening

The IRS is getting pickier on what qualifies, especially around timelines and what counts as “like-kind.”
What this means for you:

  • You must stick to the 45-day ID and 180-day closing windows. No exceptions.
  • Personal property is out—only real property qualifies.
  • Make sure your replacement property is properly documented.

If you’re sloppy on the rules, the IRS won’t hesitate to turn your tax-deferred exchange into a taxable sale.

2. Depreciation Changes

Bonus depreciation has been phasing down every year. If you used to get 100% write-offs, those days are gone.
What this means:

  • You may only be able to claim a reduced percentage upfront.
  • You might need cost-segregation to squeeze more deductions.
  • Expect more “spread-out” depreciation instead of one big hit.

This is where planning matters—timing purchases incorrectly can cost thousands.

3. Passive Loss Limitations

Rental losses are harder to claim unless you qualify as a real-estate professional, and the IRS is tightening scrutiny.
Key points:

  • If you don’t materially participate, losses get trapped.
  • If you do qualify, losses may offset your other income—but you must prove involvement.
  • Short-term rentals have special rules that sometimes allow losses even if you’re not a real-estate pro.

This area is full of traps, and IRS examinations are on the rise.

4. Increased Attention on Property Flippers

The IRS is re-classifying more flips as ordinary income instead of capital gains.Why that matters:

  • Capital gains = lower tax rate.
  • Ordinary income = taxed at your top bracket + self-employment taxes.
  • Intent matters. Frequency matters. Records matter.

If you’re flipping, you better have your facts straight.

5. State-Level Changes

Several states are tightening or revising rules on withholding, transfer taxes, and reporting requirements.
For owners with multi-state property:

  • Expect more paperwork.
  • Expect more withholding.
  • Expect more states to fight over the same income.

Ignoring state rules is a fast track to penalties.

What You Should Do Now

To stay ahead of the changes—here’s the checklist I want every client to run through:

TO-DO LIST

  • Review each property you own: income, expenses, depreciation schedules.
  • Confirm whether you materially participate in each rental.
  • Check your 1031 plans early—don’t wait until you’re under contract.
  • Evaluate cost-segregation for any high-value rentals or commercial properties.
  • Plan for reduced bonus depreciation before buying or improving property.
  • Verify state-level filing and withholding rules if you operate in multiple states.
  • Talk to us before selling, buying, refinancing, or starting a flip.

Good decisions come from facts, not assumptions—and the IRS is always happier when you make mistakes