Owning rental property is one of the most tax-advantaged investments available. The IRS allows landlords to deduct a wide range of expenses against their rental income, and the depreciation deduction alone can shelter thousands of dollars from taxation each year. But to take full advantage of these benefits, you need to understand what qualifies, how to report it correctly on Schedule E, and how the passive activity rules affect your ability to use rental losses.
This guide covers every major rental property tax deduction, explains the mechanics of depreciation, walks through the passive activity rules, and shows you how to keep records that will hold up to IRS scrutiny.
How Rental Income Is Taxed
Rental income is reported on Schedule E (Form 1040), Supplemental Income and Loss. Unlike earned income reported on Schedule C, rental income is generally classified as passive income. This distinction matters because passive losses can only offset passive income, with limited exceptions.
Your taxable rental income is calculated as:
Gross Rental Income - Deductible Expenses = Net Rental Income (or Loss)
The net income is added to your other income on your Form 1040 and taxed at your ordinary income tax rate. Importantly, rental income is not subject to self-employment tax (Social Security and Medicare taxes), which is a significant advantage over active business income.
What Counts as Rental Income
Report all of the following as rental income:
- Monthly rent payments received
- Advance rent (any amount received before the period it covers, taxable in the year received regardless of the period it covers)
- Security deposits that you keep (either because the tenant forfeited them or you applied them to unpaid rent or damages)
- Lease cancellation payments from tenants who break their lease
- Tenant-paid expenses that are your obligation (if a tenant pays your property's water bill and deducts it from rent, the full rent is still your income, and the water bill is your deductible expense)
- Property or services received in lieu of rent (fair market value)
Security deposits that you intend to return to the tenant at the end of the lease are not income when received. They become income only if you keep some or all of the deposit.
Complete List of Deductible Rental Property Expenses
Here is every major category of rental expense you can deduct on Schedule E.
Mortgage Interest
Interest paid on loans used to acquire, build, or improve your rental property is fully deductible. This includes:
- Interest on the original purchase mortgage
- Interest on a home equity loan used for improvements to the rental property
- Interest on a refinanced mortgage (up to the outstanding balance of the original loan; excess may be deductible if used for improvements)
- Points paid on a loan for rental property (amortized over the life of the loan, not fully deductible in the year paid as with a primary residence)
Your lender provides the annual interest amount on Form 1098.
Property Taxes
State and local property taxes (real estate taxes) on your rental property are fully deductible on Schedule E. The $10,000 SALT deduction cap that applies to personal residences does not apply to rental properties, because these are business expenses, not personal itemized deductions.
Insurance
All insurance premiums related to your rental property are deductible, including:
- Landlord insurance (property and liability coverage)
- Flood insurance
- Umbrella liability policies covering rental properties
- Mortgage insurance premiums (PMI)
- Title insurance (amortized over the loan period in some cases)
Repairs and Maintenance
The cost of keeping your rental property in good working condition is deductible in the year the expense is incurred. This includes:
- Plumbing repairs
- Electrical work
- Roof patching and leak repair
- Appliance repairs
- HVAC maintenance and repair
- Painting (interior and exterior)
- Fixing broken windows, doors, or locks
- Pest control
- Landscaping and lawn maintenance
- Snow removal
- Gutter cleaning
Important distinction: Repairs maintain the property in its current condition. Improvements add value, extend the useful life, or adapt the property to a new use. Repairs are deductible immediately; improvements must be depreciated over time. Replacing a broken faucet is a repair. Remodeling the entire bathroom is an improvement.
Depreciation
Depreciation is one of the largest and most valuable rental property deductions. It allows you to recover the cost of the property (excluding land) over its useful life, even though the property may actually be appreciating in market value.
We cover depreciation in detail in the next section.
Property Management Fees
If you hire a property management company to handle tenant screening, rent collection, maintenance coordination, and other management tasks, their fees are fully deductible. Typical fees range from 8% to 12% of monthly rent collected.
Utilities
If you pay for utilities on behalf of tenants (common in multi-unit properties or furnished rentals), the costs are deductible:
- Electricity
- Gas and heating
- Water and sewer
- Trash and recycling
- Internet and cable (if provided as part of the rental)
Advertising and Marketing
Costs to find tenants are deductible, including:
- Online listing fees (Zillow, Apartments.com, Craigslist)
- Print advertising
- "For Rent" signs
- Photography and videography of the property
- Tenant screening service fees
Travel Expenses
Travel to and from your rental property for legitimate business purposes is deductible. This includes:
- Mileage driven to the property for repairs, inspections, or tenant meetings (at the standard business mileage rate or actual vehicle expenses)
- Airfare, hotel, and meals for travel to a rental property in another city (meals subject to 50% limitation)
- Local transportation costs (parking, tolls) when visiting the property
Keep a log of every trip including the date, destination, purpose, and miles driven. The same IRS mileage log requirements that apply to other business driving apply here.
Professional Services
Fees paid to professionals for rental-related services are deductible:
- Accountant or tax preparer fees (for rental portion of your return)
- Attorney fees for lease preparation, evictions, or property-related legal matters
- Real estate agent commissions for finding tenants (not for buying or selling the property; those are capitalized costs)
- Bookkeeping services
Office Supplies and Other Administrative Costs
Smaller expenses related to managing your rental business are also deductible:
- Stamps, envelopes, and mailing costs for tenant correspondence
- Accounting software subscriptions
- Printer ink and paper for lease agreements
- Bank fees on accounts used for rental income and expenses
- Landlord association membership dues
Homeowners Association (HOA) Fees
If your rental property is in a community with an HOA, the monthly or annual fees are fully deductible.
Casualty and Theft Losses
If your rental property is damaged by a sudden, unexpected event (fire, storm, flood, vandalism, theft) and insurance does not cover the full loss, the unreimbursed portion may be deductible. Casualty losses on rental property are not subject to the personal casualty loss limitations that apply to your primary residence.
Understanding Depreciation for Rental Property
Depreciation is a non-cash deduction that reduces your taxable rental income without requiring any out-of-pocket spending in the current year. For many landlords, depreciation is the deduction that turns a taxable profit into a tax-sheltered cash flow.
How Residential Rental Property Depreciation Works
The IRS requires you to depreciate residential rental property over 27.5 years using the straight-line method. This means you deduct an equal amount each year for 27.5 years.
Step 1: Determine Your Depreciable Basis
Your depreciable basis is generally your purchase price plus closing costs and any improvements, minus the value of the land.
Example:
- Purchase price: $300,000
- Closing costs (capitalized): $5,000
- Total basis: $305,000
- Land value (from property tax assessment, typically 15-25% of total): $61,000
- Depreciable basis (building only): $305,000 - $61,000 = $244,000
Step 2: Calculate Annual Depreciation
$244,000 / 27.5 years = $8,873 per year
This $8,873 deduction reduces your taxable rental income every year for 27.5 years, even though the property might be increasing in market value.
Step 3: Depreciate Improvements Separately
Capital improvements (new roof, HVAC system, kitchen remodel, new appliances) are depreciated over their own recovery period. Residential rental property improvements are generally depreciated over 27.5 years, but certain components have shorter lives:
- Appliances and carpeting: 5 years
- Office furniture and equipment: 7 years
- Land improvements (fencing, driveways, landscaping): 15 years
- Residential buildings and structural components: 27.5 years
Depreciation Recapture When You Sell
When you sell a rental property, the IRS "recaptures" the depreciation you claimed (or should have claimed) by taxing that amount at a rate of up to 25%. This is in addition to any capital gains tax on appreciation.
Example:
- You owned the property for 10 years and claimed $88,730 in total depreciation
- You sell the property for $400,000 (original basis of $305,000)
- Your adjusted basis is $305,000 - $88,730 = $216,270
- Total gain: $400,000 - $216,270 = $183,730
- Depreciation recapture ($88,730) taxed at up to 25% = up to $22,183
- Remaining gain ($95,000) taxed at long-term capital gains rate (0%, 15%, or 20%)
You can defer this tax through a 1031 like-kind exchange, where you reinvest the proceeds into another qualifying rental property.
Passive Activity Rules and the $25,000 Exception
Rental activities are generally classified as passive activities under IRC Section 469. This means rental losses can only offset other passive income, not active income like wages or self-employment earnings.
However, there is an important exception that benefits many landlords.
The $25,000 Special Allowance
If you actively participate in managing your rental property, you can deduct up to $25,000 of rental losses against your non-passive income (wages, business income, etc.) each year. This allowance phases out as your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) increases:
- Full $25,000 allowance for MAGI of $100,000 or less
- Reduced allowance for MAGI between $100,000 and $150,000 (reduced by $1 for every $2 of MAGI over $100,000)
- No allowance for MAGI over $150,000
Active participation means you are involved in management decisions such as approving tenants, setting rental terms, and authorizing repairs. You do not need to do the hands-on work yourself; you just need to make the decisions. Using a property manager does not disqualify you, as long as you retain decision-making authority.
Real Estate Professional Status
If you qualify as a real estate professional under IRS rules, your rental activities are not automatically treated as passive. This means you can deduct unlimited rental losses against your other income.
To qualify, you must:
- Spend more than 750 hours during the year in real property trades or businesses in which you materially participate
- Spend more time in real property activities than in any other trade or business
Both spouses' hours cannot be combined; one spouse must independently meet the 750-hour test. This status is most relevant for full-time real estate investors, agents, brokers, and property managers.
Suspended Passive Losses
If your rental losses exceed what you can deduct in the current year (because of the passive activity rules or the $25,000 phaseout), the excess losses are not lost. They are suspended and carried forward to future years, where they can offset:
- Future passive income from any source
- Gain when you sell the rental property (all suspended losses are released upon disposition)
Reporting on Schedule E
Schedule E (Form 1040) is where you report rental income and expenses. Here is how the form is organized:
Part I: Income or Loss From Rental Real Estate
For each rental property (up to three per Schedule E; attach additional copies for more properties), you report:
- Property type and address
- Days rented at fair rental value and days of personal use (important for vacation rental rules)
- Rental income received
- Expenses by category:
- Advertising
- Auto and travel
- Cleaning and maintenance
- Commissions
- Insurance
- Legal and professional fees
- Management fees
- Mortgage interest
- Other interest
- Repairs
- Supplies
- Taxes
- Utilities
- Depreciation
- Other expenses
- Net income or loss for each property
Filing Tips
- Report each property separately. Do not combine income and expenses from multiple properties onto a single line.
- If you have more than three rental properties, use additional copies of Schedule E and total them on one main Schedule E.
- Attach Form 4562 for depreciation details if you placed any property or improvement in service during the tax year.
- Complete Form 8582 (Passive Activity Loss Limitations) if you have a net rental loss and need to determine how much you can deduct in the current year.
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Record-Keeping Requirements for Landlords
The IRS requires you to keep records that support your rental income and deductions. Good record-keeping is also essential for calculating depreciation, tracking your adjusted basis, and preparing for an eventual sale.
What to Keep
- Income records: Copies of leases, rent receipts, bank statements showing deposits, 1099s received from tenants or platforms (like Airbnb or VRBO)
- Expense receipts: Every receipt for repairs, supplies, insurance, professional services, and other costs
- Mortgage documents: Loan closing statements (HUD-1 or Closing Disclosure), Form 1098 (annual interest statement)
- Property records: Purchase closing documents, appraisals, property tax assessments, records of improvements with dates and costs
- Depreciation schedules: Maintain a running record of the original cost, date placed in service, recovery period, and cumulative depreciation for each asset
- Mileage logs: If you drive to your rental property, keep a log meeting IRS requirements
- Tenant records: Lease agreements, security deposit accounting, correspondence
How Long to Keep Records
- Keep records related to income and expenses for at least three years after you file the return (or the due date, whichever is later)
- Keep records related to property basis, improvements, and depreciation for as long as you own the property, plus three years after you sell it and file the return reporting the sale
- When in doubt, keep it. Storage costs are minimal compared to the cost of not having a record when you need it.
Practical Tips for Maximizing Your Rental Property Deductions
1. Track Everything in Real Time
Do not wait until January to sort through a year of bank statements and receipts. Use a dedicated system to log every expense as it occurs. Categorize expenses to match the Schedule E line items so tax preparation is straightforward.
2. Use a Separate Bank Account
Open a bank account dedicated exclusively to your rental property. All rent deposits and all property expenses should flow through this account. This creates a clean paper trail and makes it easy to generate year-end totals.
3. Distinguish Repairs from Improvements
This is one of the most common areas of confusion and audit risk. Remember:
- Repair (deductible immediately): Fixes something broken or deteriorated, keeping the property in its current condition. Patching a roof, fixing a leaky pipe, replacing a broken window pane.
- Improvement (must be depreciated): Adds value, extends useful life, or adapts the property. New roof, new HVAC system, kitchen remodel, adding a deck, converting a garage to a bedroom.
When in doubt, apply the IRS "betterment, restoration, adaptation" test. If the work betters the property beyond its original condition, restores it after a casualty, or adapts it to a new use, it is an improvement.
4. Do Not Overlook Small Expenses
Landlords frequently miss deductible expenses like:
- Mileage to and from the property
- Phone calls to tenants, contractors, and property managers
- Office supplies used for property management
- Home office expenses if you manage properties from home
- Education costs (landlord seminars, real estate courses)
- Bank and credit card fees on rental accounts
- Stamps and mailing costs for tenant notices
These small items add up over the course of a year.
5. Plan for Depreciation Recapture
Start planning for the tax impact of selling your property well before you list it. Understand how much depreciation recapture you will owe and explore options like 1031 exchanges to defer the tax. Consult with a tax professional who specializes in real estate transactions.
Track Your Rental Income and Expenses with Our Free Template
Staying organized is the foundation of maximizing your rental property deductions. Our Rental Income and Expense Tracker is built specifically for landlords and rental property investors.
The template includes:
- Monthly income tracking with fields for each unit or property
- Expense categories matching every Schedule E line item
- Separate sections for repairs vs. improvements
- Depreciation schedule tracker
- Annual summary for easy transfer to your tax return
- Space for property details, tenant information, and receipt references
Download the Rental Income & Expense Tracker and take control of your rental property finances.
Conclusion
Rental property ownership comes with substantial tax benefits, but only if you track income and expenses diligently and understand the rules. Every deductible expense you miss is money you are giving away unnecessarily. Every repair you fail to document is a deduction you cannot defend in an audit.
Start with a system for recording income and expenses as they happen. Separate your rental finances from your personal finances. Understand the difference between repairs and improvements. And keep every receipt, statement, and document related to your property for as long as the IRS could ask to see it.
Whether you own one rental unit or a portfolio of properties, good record-keeping is what separates landlords who maximize their tax benefits from those who leave money on the table.
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