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Updated about 20 hours ago on . Most recent reply

User Stats

27
Posts
43
Votes
Mark Kenney
#1 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Real Estate Coach
  • Frisco, TX
43
Votes |
27
Posts

Devastating Tax Issues with Real Estate Investing

Mark Kenney
#1 Multi-Family and Apartment Investing Contributor
  • Real Estate Coach
  • Frisco, TX
Posted

Anyone here ever get blindsided by a massive tax bill on a real estate deal?

I have.
And I know plenty of others who are freaking out right now from unexpected tax hits.

A lot of people jump into real estate for the tax advantages—and yes, they can be incredible. But if you don’t understand how those advantages actually work (and when they come due), they can turn into a ticking time bomb.

Here’s how it goes:

• You invest in a deal.
• You get juicy “paper losses” from depreciation (especially with cost seg + bonus depreciation).
• Your taxable income drops—you're pumped!
But here's the hard truth:
Those aren't permanent savings. They're deferrals.

And when that deal sells or refinances, the IRS comes knocking. Hard.

A few truths most people don’t hear about:

You can lose your entire investment and STILL owe taxes.
It’s happening right now.
If your capital account goes negative (from depreciation + operating losses), you’re in for a nasty surprise on your tax return.
Depreciation recapture isn’t always capped at 25%—it can hit your highest tax bracket.
I personally got hit with an extra $140,000 tax bill from one deal because I didn’t plan for this properly.

This isn’t fear-mongering. It’s reality.

I know investors who lost money and couldn’t pay their tax bills.

I even had an investor reach out after a sale of a deal that did perform and say:

“You sent me a K-1 with a $302,362 gain. That’s about a $45,000 tax bill. When will that distribution be sent to me?”

Answer:
It won’t.
Because they already got that money over the years—from the refinance, the cash flow, and the sale.

They just didn’t know to set some money aside.

And most CPAs don’t specialize in real estate, so they don’t educate investors on how this works.

Bottom line:

Real estate is still one of the best ways to build wealth.
But you have to understand how taxes really work—or they’ll eat you alive.

  • Mark Kenney

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