Top 10 Rental Property Deductions for Landlords (2026)
Real estate is the only investment where you can make profit but show a “loss” to the IRS. How? By using legal deductions. Here is the cheat sheet to ensure you keep your rental income, instead of giving it to the government.
1. Depreciation: The King of Deductions
This is why rich people love real estate. The IRS assumes your building is “wearing out” and lets you deduct a portion of its value every year.
| Rental Income | Expenses | Taxable Profit |
|---|---|---|
| $20,000 / yr | -$8,000 (Tax/Ins) | $12,000 (Cash) |
| Minus Depreciation | -$10,000 (Paper) | |
| IRS Sees: | $2,000 Only |
Formula: (Building Value ÷ 27.5) = Annual Deduction.
Note: Land cannot be depreciated. Only the structure.
The Other 9 Deductions
2. Mortgage Interest
Usually your biggest expense. The bank sends you Form 1098. Copy that number.
3. Property Taxes
Fully deductible against rental income (Not subject to the $10k SALT cap!).
4. Repairs (The “Safe Harbor” Rule)
Fixing a leak? Painting a wall? Deduct 100% this year.
Pro Tip: Anything under $2,500 per invoice can usually be expensed immediately under the “De Minimis Safe Harbor” election.
5. Insurance
Landlord policies, flood insurance, liability coverage.
6. Professional Fees
Lawyer for evictions, CPA for taxes, Property Management fees (8-10%).
7. Travel (Careful)
Driving to inspect the property? You can deduct mileage (Standard Rate). But don’t try to deduct a “vacation” just because you checked your email there.
8. Utilities
If you pay for water, trash, or gas, deduct it. (If the tenant pays, you deduct nothing).
9. Home Office
If you manage the properties from a dedicated room in your house, you can take the Home Office Deduction.
10. QBI (Qualified Business Income)
The cherry on top. If your rental activity qualifies as a “business” (safe harbor rules apply), you can deduct 20% of your net rental income tax-free.
Pro Tip: Repair vs. Improvement
This is where audits happen. Know the difference.
The “BAR” Test
1. Better the property? (New addition)
2. Adapt it to new use? (Converting attic to bedroom)
3. Restore it? (Replacing entire roof)
If YES, it is an IMPROVEMENT. You must depreciate it over 27.5 years.
If NO (just patching holes), it is a REPAIR. Deduct it all now.