National Directory · Real Estate CPAs

Find a Real Estate CPA — Investor & Landlord Tax Advisors

Find real estate CPAs for landlords, syndicators, flippers, and developers. Schedule E, cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, and partnership returns.

What they do

Specialized real estate tax & accounting

Generalist firms handle the basics. Real estate CPAs structure the entity, run the depreciation schedule, and protect the deferral when you sell.

Rental property tax

Schedule E preparation, passive loss tracking, and depreciation done correctly on every door.

Cost segregation

Engineering-based studies and Form 3115 catch-up to front-load depreciation deductions.

1031 exchanges

Identification window modeling, boot analysis, and Form 8824 reporting for like-kind exchanges.

Syndications & K-1s

LP K-1 review, multi-state filings, and partner capital account reconciliation.

Rentals

Rental property tax preparation

Schedule E preparation done right — per-property P&Ls, depreciation reconciled, repairs vs. improvements documented, and passive loss limits respected.

  • Per-property profit & loss with mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, HOA, and management fees tracked separately
  • Depreciation schedule reconciled to current basis; placed-in-service dates verified
  • Repairs vs. capital improvements documented for IRS substantiation
  • Passive activity loss tracking and $25K active-participation allowance applied where eligible
  • 1099-NEC issued to property managers, contractors, and handymen paid $600+
  • Schedule E delivered tax-ready by mid-February so personal returns aren't held up

Form 1040 Schedule E

Schedule E filing

Most landlords' biggest tax surface lives on Schedule E. Done correctly it's straightforward; done wrong it triggers PAL disallowance and depreciation recapture surprises later.

  • One column per property, even for single-LLC portfolios — required by IRS
  • Land vs. building basis split correctly at acquisition (only the building depreciates)
  • 27.5-year residential / 39-year commercial straight-line depreciation
  • Section 179 not allowed on residential rentals — bonus depreciation only via cost seg
  • Suspended losses carried forward year-over-year until disposition or REPS qualification
  • Form 4562 attached the first year a property is placed in service and any year cost seg or 179 is claimed

Cost segregation

Cost segregation studies

An engineering-based cost seg study reclassifies 20–35% of building basis into 5, 7, and 15-year property — eligible for bonus depreciation and a massive first-year deduction.

  • Most worthwhile on depreciable basis of $500K+ — below that, fees often eat the benefit
  • Bonus depreciation phase-down: 60% in 2024, 40% in 2025, 20% in 2026 under current law
  • Catch-up via Form 3115 lets you claim missed depreciation on prior-year placed-in-service properties without amending
  • Recapture at sale taxed as ordinary income up to 25% — coordinate with 1031 exit planning
  • Pairs powerfully with Real Estate Professional Status to offset W-2 income
  • Engineering-based study delivers an IRS-defensible report; rule-of-thumb estimates do not

Section 1031

1031 exchange reporting

Defer gain on the sale of investment real estate by exchanging into like-kind replacement property. The IRS rules are unforgiving — every day and dollar must be documented.

  • 45-day identification window and 180-day closing window run concurrently from the relinquished sale
  • Qualified Intermediary required — touching the proceeds disqualifies the exchange
  • Identification rules: 3-property rule, 200% rule, or 95% rule — pick one and document it
  • Boot (cash or debt relief) is taxable to the extent received — your CPA models this before closing
  • Form 8824 attached to the return for the exchange year; basis carries over to the replacement property
  • Reverse and improvement exchanges available but require structuring 60–90 days ahead

Airbnb & VRBO

Short-term rental tax planning

STRs sit in a different tax bucket from long-term rentals. The 'STR loophole' — average rental period of 7 days or less plus material participation — lets losses offset W-2 income without REPS.

  • Average rental period of 7 days or less flips the property out of passive activity rules
  • Material participation (100 hours and more than anyone else, or 500 hours) unlocks loss against W-2
  • Substantial services (daily cleaning, meals, concierge) can convert rental to self-employment income subject to SE tax
  • Local occupancy and lodging taxes (TOT, hotel tax) tracked separately from income tax
  • Cleaning fees, platform commissions, channel manager fees, and supplies separately categorized
  • Cost segregation paired with the STR loophole is one of the highest-leverage tax plays available

REPS

Real Estate Professional Status

REPS is the single biggest lever for high-income professionals adding rentals. Qualify, and rental losses become non-passive — offsetting W-2, business, and investment income.

  • 750+ hours in real property trades or businesses during the tax year
  • More than half of all personal services performed during the year must be in real estate
  • Material participation in each rental — or file an aggregation election to treat all rentals as one activity
  • Hours log is non-negotiable; the IRS routinely disallows REPS for missing or reconstructed logs
  • Spouse's hours don't combine for the 750/half-time tests, but either spouse qualifying applies to the joint return
  • REPS plus cost seg plus bonus depreciation is the classic high-W-2 wealth strategy

Syndications & funds

Syndication K-1 support

LPs in real estate syndications get a K-1 every spring — often late, often complex, frequently spanning multiple states. A real estate CPA reads them fluently and files the state returns they trigger.

  • Composite vs. non-resident state filings — your CPA picks the right path for each sponsor's footprint
  • Passive losses tracked at the activity level until disposition or REPS qualification
  • Capital account reconciliation against sponsor reporting (sponsors get this wrong more than you'd think)
  • Section 199A (QBI) deduction applied where the partnership qualifies
  • Form 8990 (business interest limitation) flow-through reconciled on the personal return
  • Final K-1 wind-down: depreciation recapture, capital gain split, and basis verification

Form 1065

Partnership returns

Multi-member LLCs and partnerships holding real estate file Form 1065. Done well, it's the foundation for clean K-1s and predictable investor relations.

  • Form 1065 filed by March 15 (extension to September 15); $245/partner/month penalty for late filing
  • Partner capital accounts on tax basis, with reconciliation to GAAP/704(b) where relevant
  • Special allocations (preferred returns, waterfalls, promote) modeled correctly through K-1s
  • Section 754 election for inside basis step-up on partner buy-ins
  • Composite state returns and PTET (pass-through entity tax) elections where they save the partners money
  • Schedules K-2 and K-3 prepared whenever there are foreign partners or foreign-source income

Books

Property-level bookkeeping

Per-door books in QuickBooks, AppFolio, Buildium, or Stessa — categorized monthly, reconciled to bank, and ready for tax season instead of reconstructed in March.

  • Chart of accounts structured for real estate (CapEx vs. R&M, mortgage P&I split, escrow tracking)
  • Per-property class or location tagging so each unit has a standalone P&L
  • Monthly bank, credit-card, and security deposit reconciliations
  • Property management software (AppFolio, Buildium, Stessa, RentManager) synced and reconciled
  • Owner statements and investor distributions tracked accurately
  • Year-end clean books delivered to the tax CPA without a clean-up engagement

Planning

Investor tax planning

Real estate tax outcomes are decided in November and at acquisition — not in April. A real estate CPA runs the quarterly modeling that compliance-only firms skip.

  • Quarterly estimated-tax projections updated for acquisitions, dispositions, and refinances
  • Entity structure reviewed annually as the portfolio grows (sole prop, LLC, multi-member, S-corp for flips)
  • Cost seg / bonus depreciation timing coordinated with high-income years
  • 1031 exit modeling before listing — boot, debt replacement, basis carryover
  • Opportunity Zone deferral and step-up analysis where eligible
  • Retirement plan layering: Solo 401(k), SEP-IRA, defined benefit on flip income

Commercial

Commercial real estate accounting

Office, retail, industrial, and mixed-use properties demand lease-level accounting, CAM reconciliations, and 39-year depreciation handled at scale.

  • NNN lease accounting: base rent, CAM, insurance, and real estate tax reimbursements tracked separately
  • Annual CAM reconciliations prepared for tenants on a triple-net basis
  • 39-year straight-line depreciation (commercial) and 15-year qualified improvement property treatment
  • Lease incentive (TI allowance) capitalization and amortization over lease term
  • ASC 842 lease accounting on the owner's books where required
  • Construction-in-progress tracking with interest capitalization (Section 263A)

What it costs

Real estate CPA pricing

Typical fee ranges in the US. Coastal metros and complex portfolios trend toward the high end; rural and single-property work toward the low.

ServiceTypical rangeNotes
Schedule E per rental property$300 – $600Add-on to a personal return; volume discounts common at 5+ doors
LLC return (Form 1065)$1,200 – $3,500Multi-member LLCs and partnerships holding real estate
S-corp return (Form 1120-S)$1,200 – $2,800Typical for active flippers and short-term rental operators
Cost segregation study$4,000 – $15,000Engineering-based, depending on property size and complexity
1031 exchange coordination$1,500 – $4,500Includes QI coordination, identification modeling, and Form 8824
Monthly bookkeeping (per property)$75 – $250Per-door pricing; AppFolio/Buildium/Stessa integrations included
Full-service real estate CPA (annual)$5,000 – $40,000+Bookkeeping plus tax planning plus returns; scales with portfolio size

Vetting checklist

Questions to ask a real estate CPA

  1. 1
    How many real estate investor clients do you serve, and what's your typical portfolio size?
  2. 2
    Are you fluent in cost segregation, Real Estate Professional Status, and the short-term rental loophole?
  3. 3
    How do you coordinate with my Qualified Intermediary on 1031 exchanges?
  4. 4
    Do you prepare partnership returns and syndication K-1s in-house?
  5. 5
    Which property management software do you integrate with (AppFolio, Buildium, Stessa, RentManager)?
  6. 6
    What's your process for quarterly tax planning vs. compliance-only March work?
  7. 7
    How do you handle multi-state filings when I own rentals in different states?
  8. 8
    What does your annual fee structure look like for a portfolio my size?

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Common questions

Real estate CPA FAQs

Why hire a real estate CPA instead of a generalist?+

Generalist CPAs handle Schedule E mechanically. Real estate CPAs structure entities, run cost segregation, coordinate 1031 exchanges, and qualify clients for REPS — the work that actually moves the tax bill. On a real estate portfolio, the planning gap between a generalist and a specialist easily covers the fee multiple times over.

When does cost segregation make sense?+

Typically on depreciable basis of $500K+. Below that, the study fee (often $4K–$8K) can exceed the present-value benefit. Cost seg is most powerful when paired with bonus depreciation in high-income years, or with Real Estate Professional Status to offset W-2 income.

How do I qualify for Real Estate Professional Status (REPS)?+

You need 750+ hours in real property trades or businesses, AND more than half of all your personal services for the year must be in real estate. You also need material participation in each rental, or you file an aggregation election treating all rentals as one activity. Keep a contemporaneous hours log — the IRS routinely disallows REPS for poor documentation.

What's the short-term rental tax loophole?+

If your STR's average rental period is 7 days or less AND you materially participate, the property is no longer a passive rental. Losses (especially from cost seg and bonus depreciation) can offset W-2 income directly — without needing to qualify for REPS. It's one of the highest-ROI strategies for high-income professionals adding their first investment property.

How do 1031 exchanges actually work?+

You sell an investment property, the proceeds go to a Qualified Intermediary (you cannot touch them), and you identify replacement property within 45 days and close within 180 days. The gain is deferred — not eliminated — into the replacement property's basis. Done right, you can roll gains forever and step them up at death. Done wrong, you owe tax plus penalties.

Should I put each rental property in its own LLC?+

For meaningful liability isolation, yes. Most attorneys recommend one LLC per property, or grouped by risk profile. Weigh that against annual state filing fees and the cost of multiple partnership returns if the LLCs have multiple members.

How much does a real estate CPA cost?+

Schedule E preparation runs $300–$600 per property. Partnership returns run $1,200–$3,500. Full-service real estate CPAs handling bookkeeping, tax planning, and returns typically charge $5,000–$40,000+ annually, depending on portfolio size and complexity. See the pricing table on this page for the full breakdown.

Do you have to be local to my properties?+

No. Most real estate CPAs work remotely with clients across the country. What matters is whether they know the federal real estate tax code cold and can coordinate state filings wherever your properties sit. Local matters only when state-specific rules (like California's 1031 clawback or Texas franchise tax) demand fluency.

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