Rental real estate has one of the most tax-favorable treatment of any investment — but only for landlords who understand how to use depreciation, expense deductions, and the passive activity rules correctly.
What rental income you must report
All amounts received from tenants: rent payments, advance rent, security deposits kept, payment for canceling a lease, services provided instead of rent. Report on Schedule E (Supplemental Income and Loss).
The deductions that offset rental income
- Mortgage interest (only the interest portion, not principal)
- Property taxes
- Depreciation (the most powerful — explained below)
- Insurance premiums
- Repairs (not improvements)
- Property management fees
- Travel for rental property management
- Professional services (accountant, attorney)
- Advertising and tenant screening
Depreciation: the tax shelter most landlords underuse
The IRS allows you to deduct the cost of the building (not land) over 27.5 years as if it's wearing out. On a property where the building is worth $300,000: you deduct $10,909/year regardless of whether the property appreciates. This non-cash deduction frequently turns taxable rental income into a paper loss — even when the investment is profitable in cash terms.
Passive activity loss rules
Rental losses are "passive" and generally can only offset passive income. Exception: Real estate professionals (750+ hours/year in real estate materially participating) can deduct unlimited losses against ordinary income. For most W-2 employees: up to $25,000 of rental losses can offset ordinary income if MAGI is under $100,000 (phases out to $150,000).
The 1031 exchange: defer taxes indefinitely
Sell a rental property, reinvest proceeds into a "like-kind" property within 180 days: defer all capital gains taxes and depreciation recapture. Done repeatedly, real estate investors can defer millions in taxes across a lifetime of property sales.
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About the author

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.
- Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
- Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
- AI and ITIL certifications
- 15+ years in regulated financial services
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