Real estate losses can reduce your tax bill, but only if you follow the IRS rules. Many investors assume all rental losses are deductible immediately. In reality, the passive loss rules limit who can use them and when. This guide explains exactly how real estate losses work in 2026 and how to claim them correctly.
Summary Rental losses are usually passive, which means they can only offset passive income unless you qualify for special exceptions. High earners often carry losses forward.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: Are Real Estate Losses Deductible?
- The LOSS Framework for Investors
- Passive vs Active: The Key Distinction
- The $25,000 Special Allowance
- Material Participation and Real Estate Professional Status
- How Losses Are Calculated
- Suspended Losses and Carryforwards
- At-Risk Rules (Another Gatekeeper)
- Grouping Elections and Multiple Properties
- When You Can Use Losses
- How Depreciation Creates Paper Losses
- Examples for Common Scenarios
- Losses on Disposition
- Recordkeeping Checklist
- State Tax Considerations
- Common Mistakes and Audit Risks
- FAQs
- Updated for 2026: What to Watch
- Change Log
Quick Answer: Are Real Estate Losses Deductible?
Yes, but it depends on your income and participation. Rental losses are usually passive and can only offset passive income. If you actively participate and your income is below certain thresholds, you may use up to a limited amount against non-passive income.
The LOSS Framework for Investors
Use LOSS to remember the rules:
L = Loss type (passive vs active)
O = Offset limits (passive only unless exception)
S = Special allowance for qualifying taxpayers
S = Suspended losses carry forward
Caption: Passive loss limits determine when rental losses reduce your taxes.
Passive vs Active: The Key Distinction
Most rental activities are considered passive by default, even if you manage the property.
Passive income includes:
- Rental income
- Income from limited partnerships
Active or non-passive income includes:
- W-2 wages
- Self-employment income
Passive losses can only offset passive income unless you qualify for exceptions.
The $25,000 Special Allowance
If you actively participate in your rental property and your income is below certain thresholds, you can deduct up to $25,000 of rental losses against non-passive income.
This allowance phases out as your income rises and disappears for higher earners.
Material Participation and Real Estate Professional Status
If you materially participate in real estate activities and meet the real estate professional rules, your rental losses may be treated as non-passive, which allows broader deductions.
For the detailed rules, see Real Estate Professional Status.
How Losses Are Calculated
Rental losses come from:
Rental income
- Cash expenses
- Depreciation
= Net rental result
Depreciation is often the factor that turns a small profit into a loss.
Suspended Losses and Carryforwards
If you cannot deduct a passive loss this year, it is suspended and carried forward. Suspended losses can offset:
- Future passive income, or
- The gain when you sell the property in a taxable transaction
At-Risk Rules (Another Gatekeeper)
Even if a loss is passive, you can only deduct amounts for which you are at risk. Generally, that means:
- Your cash invested
- Your share of liabilities for which you are personally responsible
Nonrecourse loans often do not increase your at-risk amount. If you are not at risk, the loss is suspended even if passive rules allow it.
Grouping Elections and Multiple Properties
If you own multiple rental properties, you may be able to group activities for material participation purposes. Grouping can help qualify for non-passive treatment, but it has long-term consequences and should be chosen carefully.
If you are close to real estate professional status, grouping decisions can change whether losses are deductible.
When You Can Use Losses
You can use rental losses if:
- You have passive income to offset, or
- You qualify for the $25,000 allowance, or
- You meet real estate professional status rules, or
- You sell the property and release suspended losses
How Depreciation Creates Paper Losses
Depreciation is a non-cash expense that often turns a small profit into a loss. This is why many rentals show a tax loss even when they have positive cash flow. If you cannot use the loss due to passive rules, it becomes a suspended loss you may use later. This is one of the biggest differences between accounting profit and taxable profit. It matters.
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Examples for Common Scenarios
Example 1: Moderate Income Landlord
Rental loss: $8,000
Modified AGI: $90,000
Result: Can use the loss under the $25,000 allowance.
Example 2: High Income Landlord
Rental loss: $15,000
Modified AGI: $200,000
Result: Loss is suspended and carried forward.
Example 3: Real Estate Professional
Rental loss: $30,000
Meets material participation tests
Result: Loss can offset other income.
Losses on Disposition
When you sell a rental in a taxable transaction, suspended losses tied to that property are typically released and can offset gains. This is a common way investors "unlock" years of suspended passive losses.
However, depreciation recapture still applies. See Depreciation Recapture Explained.
Recordkeeping Checklist
Keep documentation that supports your loss calculations:
- Rental income and expense records
- Depreciation schedules
- Proof of active participation
- At-risk investment records
- Prior-year suspended loss schedules
If you claim active participation or real estate professional status, keep a simple log of your time and decisions. Documentation is the difference between a valid loss and a disallowed one.
State Tax Considerations
States may apply different passive loss rules or income thresholds. Some states do not follow federal grouping elections. Always confirm state treatment before relying on federal loss rules. If you file multiple state returns, track losses by state to avoid mismatches.
Common Mistakes and Audit Risks
- Assuming all rental losses offset W-2 income
- Forgetting to track suspended losses
- Failing to document active participation
- Mixing personal and rental expenses
- Ignoring depreciation (the IRS treats it as taken)
FAQs
Can rental losses offset stock gains?
Rental losses are passive, so they generally cannot offset portfolio income unless you meet an exception.
What counts as active participation?
Making management decisions, approving tenants, or overseeing repairs can count.
Do I lose suspended losses when I sell?
No. Suspended losses are typically released when you sell the property in a taxable transaction.
Updated for 2026: What to Watch
For 2026, watch for:
- Changes to income thresholds for the $25,000 allowance
- IRS guidance on real estate professional status
- State-level treatment of passive losses
Change Log
- 2026-02-16: Initial 2026 edition with LOSS framework and examples.
Sources: IRS Publication 527, IRS Publication 925, Schedule E instructions.