Flipping houses can be profitable, but the tax rules are very different from long-term real estate investing. In 2026, most flips are taxed as ordinary income, not capital gains, and that can surprise new investors. This guide explains how house flipping is taxed in the U.S., what expenses you can deduct, and how to avoid costly mistakes.
Summary Most flips are treated as dealer activity, which means profits are taxed as ordinary income and may be subject to self-employment tax. Keep clean records and plan for higher tax rates than long-term rentals.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: Are House Flips Taxed as Capital Gains?
- The FLIP Framework
- Investor vs Dealer: The IRS Test
- Ordinary Income vs Capital Gains
- Self-Employment Tax and House Flips
- Deductible Expenses for Flippers
- Cost Basis and Profit Calculation
- Holding Period Myths
- Entity Structure: LLC, S-Corp, or Sole Prop
- Estimated Taxes and Cash Planning
- Accounting Method and Inventory Treatment
- Which Tax Forms You Might Use
- Step-by-Step: How to Report Flip Income
- Examples for Common Flips
- Recordkeeping Checklist
- State and Local Tax Issues
- Common Mistakes and Audit Risks
- FAQs
- Updated for 2026: What to Watch
- Change Log
Quick Answer: Are House Flips Taxed as Capital Gains?
Usually no. The IRS often treats house flipping as a business, not an investment. That means profits are taxed as ordinary income, not long-term capital gains, even if you hold the property for more than one year in some cases.
The FLIP Framework
Use FLIP to understand how the IRS looks at your activity:
F = Frequency of transactions
L = Length of holding period
I = Intent at purchase
P = Property improvements and marketing activity
Caption: The more your activity looks like a business, the more likely you are a dealer.
Investor vs Dealer: The IRS Test
The IRS uses several factors to classify you:
- How often you buy and sell properties
- Whether you make significant improvements for resale
- How you market properties
- Your intent at purchase
If you are considered a dealer, your flips are inventory, not investments.
Ordinary Income vs Capital Gains
Dealer flips:
Profits taxed as ordinary income, potentially at higher rates.
Investor sales:
If you truly held the property as an investment, gains may qualify for capital gains treatment.
The difference can be massive, which is why classification matters.
Self-Employment Tax and House Flips
Dealer profits can also be subject to self-employment tax, which adds payroll taxes on top of income tax.
This is a common surprise for first-time flippers.
Deductible Expenses for Flippers
You can deduct ordinary and necessary business expenses, including:
- Construction and renovation costs
- Permits and inspection fees
- Marketing and staging expenses
- Utilities and insurance
- Interest on loans used for the flip
- Contractor and labor costs
These costs reduce your taxable profit.
Cost Basis and Profit Calculation
For flips, your cost basis includes:
- Purchase price
- Closing costs that add to basis
- Renovation and construction costs
- Carrying costs like utilities and insurance
Profit formula:
Selling price
- Selling costs
- Total project basis
= Taxable profit
If you miss costs in your basis, you overstate your taxable income.
Holding Period Myths
Many flippers assume holding a property for more than one year makes it a long-term capital gain. Not true if the IRS classifies you as a dealer. Intent and activity matter more than holding period.
Entity Structure: LLC, S-Corp, or Sole Prop
An LLC does not automatically reduce taxes. It may provide liability protection, but income is still taxed to you.
An S-corp can reduce self-employment taxes in some cases, but adds payroll and compliance complexity.
Choose structure based on scale and professional advice.
Estimated Taxes and Cash Planning
Flip profits often arrive in large lumps. If you do not plan for taxes, you can get hit with underpayment penalties.
Best practices:
- Set aside a percentage of each sale for taxes
- Make quarterly estimated payments
- Track profit in real time
Accounting Method and Inventory Treatment
Flips treated as dealer property are often considered inventory. That means:
- You may need to use an accrual method for certain items
- Costs are generally capitalized into inventory until sale
- Profit is recognized when the property sells
This can affect how you time deductions and income. Consult a tax professional if you flip frequently.
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Which Tax Forms You Might Use
Common federal forms include:
- Schedule C for sole proprietors
- Form 1065 for multi-member LLCs
- Form 1120-S for S-corps
- Form 4797 if the sale is treated as an investment (rare for flips)
If you hire contractors, you may also need to issue Form 1099-NEC.
Step-by-Step: How to Report Flip Income
- Track all project income and expenses.
- Determine dealer vs investor status.
- Report dealer income on Schedule C or through your business entity.
- Deduct eligible expenses.
- Pay estimated taxes quarterly.
Mid-post CTA: Organize flip receipts, permits, and contractor invoices into a single PDF bundle per project.
Examples for Common Flips
Example 1: One-Time Flip
You buy a property, renovate, and sell once in the year.
If intent was resale and you actively marketed the property, the IRS may still treat it as a dealer transaction.
Example 2: Serial Flipper
You flip three properties in a year, use contractors, and market aggressively.
Result: Dealer classification is likely.
Example 3: Accidental Flip
You bought a property to rent, but market conditions lead you to sell quickly.
Documentation of intent and rental activity may support investor treatment.
Example 4: Flip With Big Carrying Costs
Purchase price: $250,000
Renovations: $60,000
Carrying costs: $18,000
Selling price: $380,000
Selling costs: $24,000
Profit: $28,000
Even small profits can trigger large tax bills if you did not plan for ordinary income rates.
Recordkeeping Checklist
Keep a clean file per property with:
- Purchase and sale closing statements
- Contractor invoices and permits
- Marketing and staging receipts
- Loan statements and interest records
- Proof of intent (rental ads, lease drafts)
State and Local Tax Issues
Some states tax short-term real estate profits at higher rates or impose transfer taxes and city-level fees. Include local costs in your profit analysis before deciding to flip.
Common Mistakes and Audit Risks
- Assuming all flips are capital gains
- Failing to pay estimated taxes
- Mixing personal and business expenses
- Not tracking improvement costs
- Underestimating self-employment tax
FAQs
Can I use a 1031 exchange for a flip?
Usually no. Dealer property held for resale does not qualify for 1031 exchange treatment.
Do I have to pay self-employment tax on flip profits?
If you are classified as a dealer or business operator, yes.
What if I live in the property during the flip?
Living in the property does not automatically qualify it for the home sale exclusion. Intent and use matter.
Updated for 2026: What to Watch
For 2026, watch for:
- IRS guidance on dealer vs investor classification
- State tax rules on short-term real estate profits
- Local transfer taxes that affect profitability
Change Log
- 2026-02-20: Initial 2026 edition with dealer vs investor framework.
Sources: IRS guidance on dealer property, IRS Publication 523 and 544, Schedule C instructions.