Rental Income Tax Calculator
Calculate tax on rental income after deducting mortgage interest, depreciation, and expenses. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Formula
Net Rental Income = Effective Gross Income - Expenses - Depreciation
Effective Gross Income equals gross rent minus vacancy losses. Total deductions include mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, management fees, depreciation, and other expenses. Tax is calculated on net rental income at your marginal rates.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Single-Family Rental Property
Problem: Monthly rent $2,000, 5% vacancy. Annual expenses: mortgage interest $12,000, property tax $4,000, insurance $1,800, maintenance $2,400, depreciation $10,000. Federal bracket 24%, state 5%.
Solution: Gross rent: $2,000 x 12 = $24,000\nVacancy loss: $24,000 x 5% = $1,200\nEffective income: $22,800\nTotal expenses: $12,000 + $4,000 + $1,800 + $2,400 = $20,200\nNet rental income: $22,800 - $20,200 - $10,000 = -$7,400 (tax loss)\nTax owed: $0 (loss can offset other income up to $25,000)
Result: Tax Loss: $7,400 | Cash Flow: $2,600/yr ($217/mo) | Depreciation saves: $2,900 in taxes
Example 2: Multi-Unit with Property Manager
Problem: Duplex, total rent $3,500/mo, 8% vacancy. Mortgage interest $18,000, taxes $6,000, insurance $2,400, maintenance $3,600, management 10% of rent, depreciation $14,000. Federal 32%, state 6%.
Solution: Gross rent: $3,500 x 12 = $42,000\nVacancy loss: $42,000 x 8% = $3,360\nEffective income: $38,640\nManagement: $38,640 x 10% = $3,864\nTotal expenses: $18,000 + $6,000 + $2,400 + $3,600 + $3,864 = $33,864\nNet income: $38,640 - $33,864 - $14,000 = -$9,224 (tax loss)
Result: Tax Loss: $9,224 | Cash Flow: $4,776/yr | Depreciation tax savings: $5,320
Frequently Asked Questions
How is rental income taxed at the federal level?
Rental income is taxed as ordinary income at your marginal federal tax rate, which ranges from 10% to 37% depending on your total taxable income. All rental income must be reported on Schedule E of your federal tax return. However, the taxable amount is not your gross rent but rather your net rental income after subtracting all allowable deductions including mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, repairs, depreciation, and property management fees. Additionally, the Qualified Business Income deduction under Section 199A may allow rental property owners to deduct up to 20% of their net rental income if they meet certain requirements. Rental income is generally not subject to self-employment tax, which is a significant advantage over other types of business income. However, real estate professional status and material participation rules can affect how losses are treated.
What expenses can I deduct from rental income?
Landlords can deduct a wide range of expenses that are ordinary and necessary for managing and maintaining rental property. Mortgage interest is typically the largest deduction, followed by property tax payments which are fully deductible against rental income unlike the $10,000 SALT cap for personal residences. Insurance premiums including landlord liability and hazard insurance are deductible. Repair and maintenance costs for fixing plumbing, painting, replacing broken appliances, and general upkeep are fully deductible in the year incurred. Property management fees whether you hire a company or use software are deductible. Advertising costs to find tenants, legal and accounting fees related to the property, travel expenses to check on the property, and homeowner association dues are all allowable deductions. The key distinction is between repairs which are immediately deductible and improvements which must be capitalized and depreciated over time.
How does depreciation work for rental property?
Depreciation is a non-cash tax deduction that allows you to recover the cost of your rental property over its useful life as defined by the IRS. Residential rental property is depreciated over 27.5 years using the straight-line method, meaning you deduct an equal amount each year. Only the building value is depreciated, not the land. If you purchased a property for $300,000 and the land is worth $75,000, your depreciable basis is $225,000. Annual depreciation would be $225,000 divided by 27.5, which equals $8,182 per year. This deduction reduces your taxable rental income without requiring any actual cash outlay, making it one of the most powerful tax benefits of real estate investing. When you sell the property, you must recapture accumulated depreciation at a rate of 25%, but deferring taxes through depreciation provides significant time-value benefits.
What is the passive activity loss rule for rental properties?
The passive activity loss rules significantly affect how rental property losses can be used to offset other income. By default, rental activities are classified as passive, meaning losses can only offset other passive income and cannot be deducted against active income like wages or business profits. However, there is an important exception: if your modified adjusted gross income is $100,000 or less and you actively participate in managing the rental, you can deduct up to $25,000 in rental losses against non-passive income. This allowance phases out between $100,000 and $150,000 of MAGI. Real estate professionals who spend more than 750 hours per year in real estate activities and more time in real estate than any other profession can treat rental activities as non-passive, allowing unlimited loss deductions. Suspended passive losses that cannot be used in the current year are carried forward and can be used in future years or when the property is sold.
How do I calculate the tax benefit of depreciation on my rental?
The tax benefit of depreciation equals the depreciation deduction multiplied by your combined marginal tax rate. If your annual depreciation is $10,000 and you are in the 24% federal bracket with a 5% state tax rate, the tax savings is $10,000 times 29% which equals $2,900 per year. Over the 27.5-year depreciation period, a $275,000 building would generate $275,000 in total depreciation deductions and approximately $79,750 in tax savings at a 29% combined rate. This means you effectively reduce your after-tax cost of the property by nearly $80,000. However, when you sell the property, accumulated depreciation is recaptured and taxed at a maximum rate of 25%. Despite this recapture, depreciation still provides significant benefits because the tax savings come immediately while recapture is deferred to the eventual sale, and many investors use 1031 exchanges to defer recapture indefinitely.
What is the difference between repairs and improvements for tax purposes?
The distinction between repairs and improvements is one of the most important and frequently misunderstood concepts in rental property taxation. Repairs maintain the property in its current condition and are fully deductible in the year incurred. Examples include fixing a leaky faucet, patching a roof, repainting walls, replacing broken windows, and unclogging drains. Improvements add value, extend the useful life, or adapt the property to a new use and must be capitalized and depreciated over their recovery period. Examples include adding a new roof, installing central air conditioning, building an addition, renovating a kitchen, or replacing an entire plumbing system. The IRS uses a betterment, restoration, or adaptation test to determine classification. The safe harbor for small taxpayers allows expensing improvements under $10,000 or 2% of the property basis for properties with unadjusted basis under $1 million, which simplifies record-keeping significantly.