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92 tagged with "Real Estate"

Real estate accounting, property tracking, and investment management

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CAM Reconciliation: How to Audit Your Landlord's Year-End True-Up Bill Before You Pay It
·mike

CAM Reconciliation: How to Audit Your Landlord's Year-End True-Up Bill Before You Pay It

Industry recovery audits find 5%–15% of billed CAM charges are miscalculated or not owed. This guide explains how to read a landlord's year-end true-up statement, where pro rata share and gross-up errors hide, and how to dispute charges before the audit window closes.

real-estate
audit
reconciliation
small-business
+3
Form 1099-S Demystified: How the Right Closing-Day Certification Can Spare You a Surprise Tax Bill on Your Home Sale
·mike

Form 1099-S Demystified: How the Right Closing-Day Certification Can Spare You a Surprise Tax Bill on Your Home Sale

Form 1099-S reports the gross sale price of a home, not the net, which routinely triggers IRS CP2000 notices for sellers whose gain is fully excluded under Section 121. This guide explains the Rev. Proc. 2007-12 certification that lets qualifying principal-residence sales bypass the form, the $250,000/$500,000 thresholds, the nonqualified use trap added in 2008, and how to defensibly report when the 1099-S cannot be skipped.

real-estate
tax
tax-compliance
irs-reporting
+3
The $40,000 SALT Cap: Should You Re-Itemize in 2026?
·mike

The $40,000 SALT Cap: Should You Re-Itemize in 2026?

OBBBA raised the SALT deduction cap to $40,400 for 2026, but a 30-cent-per-dollar MAGI phase-down between $505,000 and $606,333 creates a roughly 45% effective marginal rate — the "SALT torpedo." Here is how to decide whether to re-itemize.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
personal-finance
+3
Section 1031 Boot Recognition: Cash Boot, Mortgage Boot, and Partial Deferral on Form 8824
·mike

Section 1031 Boot Recognition: Cash Boot, Mortgage Boot, and Partial Deferral on Form 8824

A working guide to how the IRS computes boot in a Section 1031 exchange — cash boot, mortgage boot, the four netting rules, depreciation recapture at 25%, carryover basis, and Form 8824 reporting — with a worked example showing how $200K of fresh equity can wipe out $200K of mortgage boot.

real-estate
tax
tax-planning
capital-gains
+2
Section 707 Disguised Sale Rules: When a Partnership Contribution Becomes a Taxable Sale
·mike

Section 707 Disguised Sale Rules: When a Partnership Contribution Becomes a Taxable Sale

A disguised sale under Section 707(a)(2)(B) collapses a partnership contribution and a related cash distribution into a taxable sale. Transfers within two years are presumed a sale; the deemed-sale fraction equals consideration received divided by property FMV.

tax
partnerships
real-estate
llc
+3
Section 707(a)(2)(B) Disguised Sale Rules: How LLC Members Contribute Property and Take Cash Without Triggering a Taxable Sale
·mike

Section 707(a)(2)(B) Disguised Sale Rules: How LLC Members Contribute Property and Take Cash Without Triggering a Taxable Sale

Section 707(a)(2)(B) recharacterizes paired property contributions and cash distributions to LLC members as taxable sales when they occur within two years. A walkthrough of the two-prong test, the rebuttable two-year presumption, the four regulatory exceptions, debt-financed distribution mechanics, and the Form 8275 disclosure that keeps partners out of audit trouble.

partnerships
llc
real-estate
tax
+3
Form 706-NA: The $60,000 Trap That Can Turn a Foreign Investor's U.S. Real Estate Into a 40% Estate Tax Bill
·mike

Form 706-NA: The $60,000 Trap That Can Turn a Foreign Investor's U.S. Real Estate Into a 40% Estate Tax Bill

Nonresident aliens who own U.S. real estate, U.S. corporate stock, or other situs property get only a $60,000 estate tax exemption — not the $13.99 million citizens enjoy in 2026 — and pay up to 40% on the excess. A working guide to Form 706-NA, FIRPTA withholding, treaty relief via Form 8833, transfer certificates, and the blocker-corporation structures that actually work.

tax
estate-planning
international-tax
real-estate
+4
Form 8300: Reporting Cash Transactions Over $10,000 for Car Dealers, Jewelers, Real Estate, and Attorneys
·mike

Form 8300: Reporting Cash Transactions Over $10,000 for Car Dealers, Jewelers, Real Estate, and Attorneys

Form 8300 requires businesses to report cash payments over $10,000 within 15 days. This guide covers who must file, what counts as cash (including cashier's checks under $10,000), the 24-hour and 12-month aggregation rules, structuring penalties up to $31,000 per form, and the industry traps that hit car dealers, jewelers, real estate operators, and attorneys.

tax-compliance
compliance
recordkeeping
real-estate
+3
Qualified Improvement Property Under Section 168(e)(6): How Restaurant, Retail, and Office Build-Outs Unlock 15-Year Recovery and 100% Bonus Depreciation
·mike

Qualified Improvement Property Under Section 168(e)(6): How Restaurant, Retail, and Office Build-Outs Unlock 15-Year Recovery and 100% Bonus Depreciation

Qualified Improvement Property (QIP) under Section 168(e)(6) lets nonresidential interior build-outs use a 15-year recovery period and qualify for 100% bonus depreciation after the OBBBA. Covers the statutory test, three exclusions, TCJA-to-OBBBA history, a worked $540,000 restaurant example, and Form 3115 catch-up deductions.

depreciation
bonus-depreciation
cost-segregation
section-179
+4
Section 163(h) Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026: $750K Cap, Grandfathered Loans, and HELOC Rules
·mike

Section 163(h) Mortgage Interest Deduction in 2026: $750K Cap, Grandfathered Loans, and HELOC Rules

Section 163(h) decides whether your largest Schedule A line is a $14,000 deduction or an $8,500 one. Here is how the permanent $750,000 TCJA cap, the grandfathered $1 million pre-2018 loans, the HELOC "substantial improvement" rule, and the 2026 return of the mortgage insurance premium deduction actually work — with worked examples and the records you need on audit.

tax-deductions
real-estate
home-ownership
personal-finance
+4
Section 163(j) Interest Expense Limitation: 30% ATI, the Small Business Exemption, and the Real Property Trade Election
·mike

Section 163(j) Interest Expense Limitation: 30% ATI, the Small Business Exemption, and the Real Property Trade Election

Section 163(j) caps the business interest deduction at 30% of adjusted taxable income, and OBBBA restored the EBITDA-style add-back for tax years beginning after December 31, 2024. This guide walks through the calculation, the small business exemption under Section 448(c), the irrevocable real property trade or business election, the partnership EBIE basis trap, and the Form 8990 reporting choreography.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
tax-compliance
+4
Section 2032A Special-Use Valuation: Cut Up to $1.46 Million Off the Estate Value of a Family Farm or Closely Held Business in 2026
·mike

Section 2032A Special-Use Valuation: Cut Up to $1.46 Million Off the Estate Value of a Family Farm or Closely Held Business in 2026

Section 2032A lets executors value qualifying farm or closely held business real property at productive use rather than fair market value, with a 2026 reduction cap of $1,460,000 — worth up to $584,000 in federal estate tax at the 40% rate. The election is irrevocable, requires material participation, and triggers a 10-year recapture period.

tax-planning
estate-planning
family-business
farming
+4
Showing 25–36 of 92 posts