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92 tagged with "Real Estate"

Real estate accounting, property tracking, and investment management

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Series LLC Structure: Master LLC, Internal Liability Walls, and When to Use It
·mike

Series LLC Structure: Master LLC, Internal Liability Walls, and When to Use It

A 2026 guide to the Series LLC: how a single master entity can hold multiple internally-isolated series, which states recognize the structure (Florida joins via SB 316 on July 1, 2026), how the IRS taxes each series, the bookkeeping discipline required to keep the liability walls intact, and when separate traditional LLCs remain the safer choice.

llc
business-structure
real-estate
liability-protection
+4
Tax Planning During Divorce: QDROs, Post-TCJA Alimony, and Section 1041 Property Transfers
·mike

Tax Planning During Divorce: QDROs, Post-TCJA Alimony, and Section 1041 Property Transfers

A practitioner's guide to the tax mechanics of divorce — how a QDRO splits a 401(k) penalty-free, why alimony in agreements executed after 2018 is no longer deductible, how Section 1041 carryover basis can turn a 50/50 settlement into an unequal one, and how the Section 121 home-sale exclusion survives when one spouse moves out.

tax-planning
tax
personal-finance
retirement-savings
+3
Wyoming vs. Delaware vs. Nevada LLC in 2026: Asset Protection, Privacy, and Annual Costs Compared
·mike

Wyoming vs. Delaware vs. Nevada LLC in 2026: Asset Protection, Privacy, and Annual Costs Compared

A 2026 comparison of Wyoming, Delaware, and Nevada LLCs across real annual costs ($110–$600), charging-order statutes, single-member protection, anonymity rules, and the foreign-qualification trap that erases out-of-state savings.

llc
business-structure
incorporation
liability-protection
+4
ASC 842 Lease Accounting for Private Companies: Putting Operating Leases on the Balance Sheet
·mike

ASC 842 Lease Accounting for Private Companies: Putting Operating Leases on the Balance Sheet

ASC 842 requires private companies to capitalize nearly every lease longer than 12 months as a right-of-use asset and a lease liability. This guide walks through the five-criteria classification test, the six-step calculation, the risk-free rate and short-term lease expedients, and the audit findings that most often trigger restatements.

financial-reporting
balance-sheet
compliance
real-estate
+4
Section 461(l) Excess Business Loss Limitation: A 2026 Guide for Pass-Through Owners
·mike

Section 461(l) Excess Business Loss Limitation: A 2026 Guide for Pass-Through Owners

Section 461(l) caps how much net business loss a noncorporate taxpayer can deduct against other income. For 2026, the OBBBA reset thresholds to $256,000 single and $512,000 joint—down from $313,000 and $626,000 in 2025. This guide explains the Form 461 calculation, the four loss-limitation gates, and planning moves for K-1 losses, bonus depreciation, and real estate.

tax
tax-planning
tax-deductions
partnerships
+4
Form 4797 Demystified: How Depreciation Recapture and Section 1231 Decide Whether Your Business Sale Is Ordinary or Capital
·mike

Form 4797 Demystified: How Depreciation Recapture and Section 1231 Decide Whether Your Business Sale Is Ordinary or Capital

Form 4797 governs every business property sale outside Schedule D and decides whether your gain is ordinary or capital. This guide walks through Section 1245 and 1250 recapture, the Section 1231 five-year lookback rule, the 25% unrecaptured Section 1250 gain rate, and seven mistakes that trigger CP2000 notices.

tax
tax-planning
depreciation
capital-gains
+4
Reverse 1031 Exchange: How to Buy Your Replacement Property Before Selling the Old One
·mike

Reverse 1031 Exchange: How to Buy Your Replacement Property Before Selling the Old One

A reverse 1031 exchange lets a real estate investor close on a replacement property before selling the relinquished one by parking title with an Exchange Accommodation Titleholder under Revenue Procedure 2000-37's safe harbor. The taxpayer must identify the relinquished property within 45 days and complete the swap within 180 days, with no extensions. EAT fees typically run $5,000 to $15,000 above a forward exchange, so the deferred gain needs to be large enough to justify the cost.

real-estate
1031-exchange
tax-planning
capital-gains
+3
Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes
·mike

Section 121 Home Sale Exclusion: How Homeowners Can Skip Up to $500,000 in Capital Gains Taxes

How Section 121 lets U.S. homeowners exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for joint filers) of capital gains on a primary home sale — covering the 24-month ownership and use tests, the two-year frequency rule, partial exclusions, depreciation recapture, and the nonqualified-use allocation.

tax
tax-planning
real-estate
home-ownership
+4
Section 199A REIT Dividend Deduction: The 20% Tax Break Most REIT Investors Don't Fully Use
·mike

Section 199A REIT Dividend Deduction: The 20% Tax Break Most REIT Investors Don't Fully Use

Section 199A lets investors deduct 20% of qualified REIT dividends from taxable income, dropping the top federal rate from 37% to about 29.6%. This guide covers Box 5 of Form 1099-DIV, the 45-day holding-period rule, Form 8995, and how OBBBA made the deduction permanent.

tax-deductions
tax-planning
real-estate
personal-finance
+3
The Short-Term Rental Tax Loophole: Offsetting W-2 Income Without Real Estate Professional Status
·mike

The Short-Term Rental Tax Loophole: Offsetting W-2 Income Without Real Estate Professional Status

How short-term rentals sit outside the Section 469 passive loss rules, what the seven-day average and material participation tests actually require, and how a six-figure W-2 earner can use cost segregation and 100% bonus depreciation to legally offset wage income.

tax
real-estate
tax-planning
tax-deductions
+5
Self-Directed IRAs for Real Estate and Alternative Assets: A Practical Compliance Guide
·mike

Self-Directed IRAs for Real Estate and Alternative Assets: A Practical Compliance Guide

A practical guide to Self-Directed IRAs (SDIRAs) — what you can hold, the disqualified-person rules under IRC §4975, UBIT and UDFI on leveraged real estate, the McNulty checkbook-control warning, and the recordkeeping disciplines that prevent a deemed distribution.

ira
retirement-savings
real-estate
tax-compliance
+4
Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT): A 3.8% Surtax Guide for High Earners and Investors
·mike

Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT): A 3.8% Surtax Guide for High Earners and Investors

The 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax kicks in once MAGI crosses $200,000 single or $250,000 joint—thresholds frozen since 2013. This guide explains who pays NIIT, how Form 8960 calculates it, which income types count (interest, dividends, capital gains, passive rentals) and which don't (wages, IRA distributions, muni interest), plus planning levers to cut exposure.

tax
tax-planning
personal-finance
capital-gains
+3
Showing 61–72 of 92 posts