IRS Red Flags: What Triggers a Real Estate Tax Audit?
“I’ll just expense the new roof.” That single sentence is the most common reason landlords get audited. The IRS computer system, known as the DIF (Discriminant Information Function), automatically scans millions of returns for anomalies. If you report perfectly round numbers, declare massive losses for years, or claim to be a “Real Estate Professional” while working a full-time tech job, your score spikes. Here are the top triggers that invite the IRS into your financial life and how to avoid them.
1. The Rule: Anomalies Trigger Audits
The IRS knows exactly how much the average landlord spends on repairs. Do you?
• Low Score: Your expenses match the average for your income level. (Safe).
• High Score: You claimed $20,000 in “Travel Expenses” to check on a rental 10 miles away. (Flagged).
Once flagged, a human agent reviews it. If they can’t explain the anomaly, they send an Audit Letter.
2. Audit Bait vs. Safe Filing (Checklist)
Review your Schedule E against this list before hitting “Submit.”
| Category | Audit Bait (Don’t Do This) | Safe Filing |
|---|---|---|
| Repairs | “New Roof: $15,000” (Expensed all at once). | “Roof Replacement” (Depreciated over 27.5 years). |
| Travel | “Travel: $5,000” (Family vacation to Florida rental). | “Auto: $200” (Mileage log for inspection only). |
| Rounding | “Cleaning: $500” “Supplies: $200” |
“Cleaning: $482.50” “Supplies: $194.12” |
| Losses | Reporting losses for 5 years straight with no profit. | Showing profit in 3 out of 5 years (Safe Harbor). |
3. Timeline: When the IRS Letter Arrives
Don’t panic. Most audits are just “Correspondence Audits” (by mail), not a scary interrogation.
| Stage | IRS Action | Your Defense |
|---|---|---|
| 1. The Notice (CP2000) |
Math Error? | |
| 2. The Exam (Field Audit) |
Deep Dive | |
| 3. The Bill (Assessment) |
Penalty |
4. Strategy: The “Real Estate Pro” Trap
The Holy Grail of tax deductions is also the biggest target.
- The Claim: “I am a Real Estate Professional (REP).” This allows you to deduct unlimited rental losses against your high W-2 salary.
- The Audit Trigger: If your W-2 job is “Full Time” (e.g., Doctor, Engineer), the IRS automatically assumes you are lying about REP status.
- The Proof: To survive this audit, you must show a Time Log proving you spent 750 hours a year on real estate AND more time on real estate than your day job. Most people fail this test.
5. Warning: Repair vs. Improvement
“I just wanted to fix it up.”
⛔ The “BAR” Test
The IRS uses the BAR test to decide if it’s a Repair (Deduct Now) or Improvement (Depreciate Later).
- B (Betterment): Did it fix a defect that existed before you bought it? (Improvement).
- A (Adaptation): Did you change the use (e.g., Garage to Bedroom)? (Improvement).
- R (Restoration): Did you replace a major component (e.g., Entire HVAC vs. one part)? (Improvement).
- Result: If it passes BAR, you must depreciate it over 27.5 years. If you expense it all at once, you will lose the audit.