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Tax Time Double-Check: Easily Missed Deductions
Tax Time Double-Check: Easily Missed Deductions

This article covers easily missed deductions that can significantly affect your tax liability. These are also highlighted in our Tax Review!

Em avatar
Written by Em
Updated over a week ago

This article highlights easily missed deductions that can significantly affect your tax liability. As you will see, most of our list focuses on deductible expenses that won't appear as a payment from your bank account.

Want a real-time look at your REI Hub books to see if you have everything below? Check out our built-in Tax Review!

Easily Missed Deductions

1) Did you book all rental-related transactions for the tax year?

This seems obvious, but it can be surprisingly easy to forget to enter an expense and, as a result, pay too much in taxes. Booking all of your rental-related transactions will result in an accurate accounting of your revenues and expenses for that year. This is easy if you have a dedicated rental bank account for all related transactions, and it is even easier if that account is linked to your accounting software!

Additionally, don't forget to enter any additional transactions you may have paid out of pocket or from a different bank account. Overall, make sure you have entered all your revenues (rent, fees, etc), operating expenses (your Schedule E expenses), and other expenditures (capital expenditures/ fixed assets).

2) Did you (or will your tax preparer) enter depreciation deductions?

Depreciation is how investors recover the costs of buying and improving rental properties. It is a tax deduction and not a directly incurred expense, so you won’t see it in your bank account.

Every owned investment property (that hasn’t already been fully depreciated) should have a depreciation entry for every tax year.

Other fixed assets, such as large improvement projects, should also be depreciated. Different kinds of fixed assets have different useful lifetimes and are depreciated on different timelines.

In REI Hub, you can enter depreciation on either a per-asset or an uncategorized basis. If you are tracking your fixed assets in REI Hub, enter depreciation per asset. If your tax preparer is managing depreciation on your behalf, you can add a general entry (based on their calculations) for your entire portfolio.

Depreciation deductions are essential to be included in your taxes. Tracking them in REI Hub is optional but highly recommended. Regardless, you and your tax preparer should agree on who is responsible for calculating annual depreciation and maintaining records.


3) Did you book any miles driven to manage or maintain your properties?

The IRS allows rental property owners to deduct miles driven while maintaining or managing their properties. Because this is an operational tax deduction without a direct expense hitting your bank account, it is an easy omission for many investors.

Add trips to the Mileage Log in REI Hub to get credit for your deductible miles driven. The required fields match the information the IRS requires to deduct mileage.

Mileage deductions will be rolled into the Auto & Travel expense category of the Schedule E report. However, they will not be displayed on the Net Income reports as they do not directly incur expenses.

4) Investors with escrowed mortgages: did you enter property tax and property insurance expenses?

Some mortgages include an escrow component. Escrow is the process in which you pay the mortgage servicer extra every month, and then they pay property tax and insurance out of that escrow account on your behalf.

The escrow component of your mortgage payment is a transfer, not a direct expense. The IRS requires you to report your actual expenses, not your estimated expenses. Therefore, you can't just report the escrow transfers as property tax or insurance expenses; you must enter the actual expenses.

Since these expenses are paid out of your escrow account on your behalf, you will not have an imported transaction from your operating bank account to prompt you to book them. So, if you have an escrowed mortgage, don't forget to book those annual property taxes and insurance expenses!




Still have questions? Reach out to our Support Team via email at [email protected] or call us at (888)939-6865.






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