Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to footer

Recap: Applied Tax Workflows and Examples

10 min
6/6

Key Takeaways

  • Quarterly tax planning, clean bookkeeping, and correct expense classification are foundational applied workflows.
  • Section 199A QBI deduction saves up to 20% on qualified rental income—scheduled to expire after 2025.
  • Installment sales spread capital gains but not depreciation recapture—plan for Year 1 recapture recognition.
  • Year-end optimization (accelerated repairs + retirement contributions) can transform rental tax outcomes by $500-$10,000+.

This recap synthesizes the applied tax workflows covered in Track 2. Review the key workflows and test your understanding of Schedule E preparation, QBI deductions, and sale tax strategies.

1

Key Workflows Summary

Annual tax planning follows a quarterly cycle: Q1 review, Q2 projection, Q3 harvesting, Q4 optimization. Schedule E reports rental income and expenses line by line—the repairs vs. improvements distinction is the most consequential classification decision. Clean bookkeeping with receipt documentation reduces preparation costs by 50%. Estimated tax payments follow the safe harbor rule: 100% of prior year tax (110% if AGI >$150K) in four quarterly installments.

2

Deductions and Credits Summary

The Section 199A QBI deduction reduces qualified rental income by up to 20%, with no wage/UBIA limitation below $383,900 MFJ. Above the threshold, the deduction is limited by the greater of 50% of wages or 25% of wages + 2.5% of UBIA. The QBI deduction expires after 2025 unless extended. De minimis safe harbor allows expensing items under $2,500 without capitalization. Year-end repair acceleration can convert rental income into deductible losses.

3

Sale Tax Strategies Summary

Property sales generate LTCG tax (0-20%), depreciation recapture (25%), NIIT (3.8%), and state tax. Timing strategies (bracket management, installment sales, Opportunity Zones) reduce the overall tax burden. Installment sales spread gain using the Gross Profit Ratio but require Year 1 recognition of depreciation recapture. Combined federal tax on a sale typically runs 20-25% of total gain for investors in the 15% LTCG bracket with NIIT exposure.

Key Takeaways

  • Quarterly tax planning, clean bookkeeping, and correct expense classification are foundational applied workflows.
  • Section 199A QBI deduction saves up to 20% on qualified rental income—scheduled to expire after 2025.
  • Installment sales spread capital gains but not depreciation recapture—plan for Year 1 recapture recognition.
  • Year-end optimization (accelerated repairs + retirement contributions) can transform rental tax outcomes by $500-$10,000+.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Treating tax planning as a once-a-year activity instead of an ongoing process

Consequence: Year-end optimization opportunities are missed, estimated tax payments are inaccurate, and the investor's overall tax position is sub-optimal

Correction: Integrate tax planning into quarterly portfolio reviews; adjust strategies as income, expenses, and portfolio composition change throughout the year

Not coordinating tax strategies across entity structure, depreciation, and disposition planning

Consequence: Isolated strategies may conflict—for example, aggressive depreciation in an entity that generates no offsetting passive income creates suspended losses with no current benefit

Correction: Develop a unified tax strategy that coordinates entity elections, depreciation timing, loss utilization, and disposition planning for maximum cumulative benefit

Test Your Knowledge

1.An investor replaces the entire roof on a rental property for $12,000. How should this be treated for tax purposes?

2.What is the maximum Section 199A QBI deduction for a married couple filing jointly with $300,000 in taxable income and $80,000 in net rental income?

3.In an installment sale, which component of the capital gain must be recognized in the year of sale regardless of the payment schedule?

Was this lesson helpful?

Your feedback helps us improve the curriculum.

Share this