Capital Improvements vs Repairs (Rental Property): The Landlord Cheat Sheet for Tax Time
Stop guessing whether flooring, paint, or HVAC is a repair or a capital improvement. Here’s a practical cheat sheet and a tracking system that works with a...
Schedule E is the form the IRS uses to decide whether your rental property is a business or a hobby, and whether your losses actually count. Every investor who owns a rental files one. Most do it wrong.
The three most common failure modes are the same three every year: property manager statements that mix capital improvements into repairs, mortgage payments booked as single line items instead of split across interest, principal, and escrow, and depreciation left on the table because the basis was never set correctly at acquisition. Each one costs you a four to five figure deduction you are legally entitled to.
The guides in this cluster walk through the mechanics of Schedule E filing from an investor's perspective, not a tax preparer's. How to read the form like an operator. Which lines your PM's statement feeds. Where cost segregation, bonus depreciation, and passive loss rules change the math. How to clean up the data before April so your CPA is not reconstructing your year from scratch at $400 an hour.
If you want the full framework, start with the pillar guide. The posts below go deep on specific failure modes and reconciliation workflows.
Read the Schedule E pillar guideStop guessing whether flooring, paint, or HVAC is a repair or a capital improvement. Here’s a practical cheat sheet and a tracking system that works with a...
Walk into your truck after a Saturday at one of your rentals and count the paper. Two Home Depot receipts. One Lowe's. A handwritten invoice from the...
It is April 14. Your Schedule E is due tomorrow. Your CPA sent you a "final list of questions" three days ago and you have been dodging it. There are...
Stop guessing whether flooring, paint, or HVAC is a repair or a capital improvement. Here’s a practical cheat sheet and a tracking system that works with a property manager.
Walk into your truck after a Saturday at one of your rentals and count the paper. Two Home Depot receipts. One Lowe's. A handwritten invoice from the plumber. A gas station receipt because that mile c
It is April 14. Your Schedule E is due tomorrow. Your CPA sent you a "final list of questions" three days ago and you have been dodging it. There are receipts in your email. Receipts in a folder on yo
Tax Day 2026 is here. If your Schedule E preparation took more than 60 seconds per property, your system is the problem, not the IRS form.
Most new landlords start with a spreadsheet and good intentions. Here is what rental property accounting actually requires and how to set up a system from day one that grows with your portfolio.
The IRS gives you a 27.5 year depreciation deduction on every rental. Most investors leave money on the table because they track it wrong.
Your mortgage payment has four components and each one goes on a different line of Schedule E. Most landlords get this wrong. Here is the right way.
Your CPA does not hate your properties. They hate your records. Here is exactly what they need and how to deliver it automatically.
Your PM's data is not tax ready. The gap between what your PM reports and what the IRS wants costs investors thousands in missed deductions.
LLC vs Trust for your rental portfolio? The wrong entity structure costs you thousands at tax time. Here is how to choose and track it all.
DoorVault splits every mortgage payment, categorizes PM statements to the right Schedule E line, and exports a CPA ready filing packet. Free plan included.
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