What This Section Covers
Types of Tax Professionals
CPAs, enrolled agents, tax preparers, and tax attorneys
Tax Implications: Buying
Deductions, credits, and establishing cost basis
Tax Implications: Selling
Capital gains, exclusions, and timing strategies
Rental Property Taxes
Deductions, depreciation, and landlord tax planning
1031 Exchanges
Deferring capital gains on investment property
Property Tax Appeals
Challenging assessments to reduce property taxes
Comparing Accountants
Questions to ask and how to evaluate options
Why Tax Planning Matters
Buying
Buying
Establish correct cost basis from day one. Understand which closing costs are deductible vs added to basis. Identify available credits for first-time buyers or energy improvements.
Selling
Selling
Primary residence exclusion can eliminate up to $500,000 in capital gains (married filing jointly). Timing, residency requirements, and proper documentation affect eligibility.
Renting out property
Renting out property
Landlords can deduct expenses, depreciate the structure, and potentially qualify for pass-through deduction. Depreciation recapture affects eventual sale.
Investing
Investing
1031 exchanges defer capital gains indefinitely. Cost segregation accelerates depreciation. Entity structure affects tax treatment.
When to Involve a Tax Professional
Before buying:- Understanding tax benefits of ownership
- Evaluating rent vs buy from tax perspective
- Planning for investment property purchases
- Calculating potential capital gains
- Timing sale for optimal tax outcome
- Evaluating 1031 exchange options
- Annual tax preparation with real estate holdings
- Rental property record keeping
- Property tax assessment reviews
- Multiple properties
- Mixed personal and rental use
- Business use of home
- Inherited property
- Divorce-related transfers
Tax law changes frequently. Strategies that worked in previous years may not apply currently. Professional guidance ensures compliance with current rules.
Tax Planning vs Tax Preparation
Tax planning: Proactive strategies to minimize taxes before transactions occur. Done throughout the year, especially before major decisions. Tax preparation: Filing returns after the tax year ends. Reports what already happened. Both matter. Planning creates opportunities. Preparation ensures accuracy and compliance.Find Tax Professionals
Research CPAs and tax professionals with real estate experience.