Real Estate Professional Status
Real Estate Professional Status: Unlock Passive Loss Deductions
By default, the IRS classifies rental real estate income (and losses) as passive. Passive losses can only offset passive income. If your rental properties generate $50,000 in paper losses from depreciation, but your only other income is a $200,000 W-2 salary, those losses sit unused (carried forward, but not deductible now). Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) changes this. If you qualify, your rental losses become non-passive and can offset any income, including W-2 wages, business income, and investment income.
Qualification Requirements
REPS has two tests, and you must pass both.
- 750-Hour Test: You must spend at least 750 hours per year in real property trades or businesses
- More-Than-Half Test: Real estate activities must be more than half of all your working hours for the year
- Real property trades include: development, construction, acquisition, conversion, rental, management, leasing, brokerage
- Each rental property must be 'materially participated in' separately, unless you elect to aggregate all rentals into one activity
- The aggregation election is critical. Without it, you must prove material participation in each property individually.
- A W-2 employee working 2,000 hours cannot qualify (would need 2,000+ RE hours). REPS works best for one spouse who is full-time in RE while the other has W-2 income.
- Keep a contemporaneous time log. The IRS challenges REPS claims aggressively. A log kept in real-time is your best defense.
The REPS Tax Impact
Sarah and Mike are married. Mike earns $300,000 as an engineer. Sarah manages their 8 rental properties full-time (1,200 hours/year). Their rentals generate $40,000 in cash flow but $120,000 in depreciation deductions (from cost segregation studies), creating an $80,000 paper loss. Without REPS: the $80,000 loss is passive and cannot offset Mike's W-2 income. It carries forward. With REPS (Sarah qualifies): the $80,000 loss offsets Mike's W-2 income. At a 35% marginal rate, that saves $28,000 in federal tax this year. They still pocket the $40,000 cash flow. REPS turns depreciation from a deferred benefit into an immediate cash tax refund.
The most common REPS structure: one spouse leaves W-2 employment to manage the rental portfolio full-time. This works when the portfolio is large enough that the tax savings from REPS exceed the lost W-2 income. With 5+ properties and cost segregation, the math often works at household incomes above $200K. Always model the full tax picture with a CPA before making the decision.
Real Estate Professional Status converts passive rental losses into active deductions that offset any income. Requires 750+ hours and more-than-half of working time in RE. Combined with cost segregation, it is the most powerful tax strategy available to real estate investors.
REPS requires 750+ hours and more-than-half of working time in RE. Combined with cost segregation, it can reduce your effective tax rate to near zero on rental income.