{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “ProfessionalService”,
“name”: “KDA Inc. u2014 Real Estate CPA Irvine”,
“description”: “Specialized real estate CPA services for Irvine, California investors. Cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, STR loophole, and entity structuring.”,
“url”: “https://kdainc.com/real-estate-cpa-irvine-ca”,
“telephone”: “+1-800-KDA-TAXES”,
“areaServed”: {
“@type”: “City”,
“name”: “Irvine”,
“containedInPlace”: {
“@type”: “State”,
“name”: “California”
},
“postalCode”: “92603”
},
“serviceType”: [
“Real Estate CPA”,
“Cost Segregation Analysis”,
“1031 Exchange Planning”,
“Real Estate Professional Status Qualification”,
“Short-Term Rental Tax Strategy”,
“Real Estate Entity Structuring”
],
“hasOfferCatalog”: {
“@type”: “OfferCatalog”,
“name”: “Real Estate Tax Services”,
“itemListElement”: [
{
“@type”: “Offer”,
“itemOffered”: {
“@type”: “Service”,
“name”: “Cost Segregation Study”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Offer”,
“itemOffered”: {
“@type”: “Service”,
“name”: “1031 Exchange Planning”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Offer”,
“itemOffered”: {
“@type”: “Service”,
“name”: “REPS Qualification”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Offer”,
“itemOffered”: {
“@type”: “Service”,
“name”: “STR Loophole Strategy”
}
}
]
},
“priceRange”: “$$”,
“knowsAbout”: [
“Real Estate Tax Strategy”,
“Cost Segregation”,
“1031 Exchange”,
“Real Estate Professional Status”,
“Short-Term Rental Tax Loophole”,
“Bonus Depreciation”,
“California Real Estate Tax Law”
]
}
Real Estate CPA in Irvine 92603
Specialized tax strategy for California real estate investors — cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, and the STR loophole.
If you own rental property in Irvine, you need more than a general accountant. You need a real estate CPA who understands one of Southern California’s most desirable markets with strong appreciation and low vacancy, knows how to deploy cost segregation studies, 1031 exchanges, and Real Estate Professional Status to legally minimize your tax bill under California’s 13.3% top income tax rate.
Cost Segregation: The Foundation of Real Estate Tax Strategy in Irvine
For Irvine real estate investors, cost segregation is not optional — it’s the foundation of a sound tax strategy. Every property you own that was purchased for more than $300,000 is a candidate for a cost segregation study. The study identifies components that qualify for 5, 7, or 15-year depreciation (vs. the standard 27.5 or 39 years), and with permanent 100% bonus depreciation, those components are fully deducted in year one. On a $1,050,000 property in Irvine, this typically generates $80,000–$180,000 in additional first-year deductions. KDA’s team will determine whether a cost segregation study makes sense for each of your Irvine properties.
REPS and the STR Loophole: Unlocking Real Estate Losses in Irvine
Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) is the key that unlocks real estate tax losses for high-income Irvine investors. Without REPS, rental losses are passive — they can only offset passive income, not your W-2 salary or business income. With REPS (750+ hours in real estate activities, more than any other profession), rental losses become non-passive and can offset any income. For a Irvine investor with $200,000 in rental losses and a $500,000 W-2 salary, REPS qualification saves $74,000–$100,000 in federal and state taxes in a single year. KDA’s team will determine if REPS is achievable for your situation and document your hours properly.
1031 Exchanges: Building Generational Wealth in Irvine
The 1031 exchange is how Irvine real estate investors build generational wealth. By continuously deferring capital gains through 1031 exchanges throughout your lifetime, you can build a multi-million dollar portfolio without ever paying capital gains tax. When you die, your heirs receive the properties with a stepped-up basis — eliminating all deferred gains permanently. KDA’s Irvine real estate CPA team will design a 1031 exchange strategy that aligns with your long-term wealth-building goals and ensures every exchange is properly structured to survive IRS scrutiny.
Entity Structure for Irvine Real Estate Investors
For Irvine real estate investors with multiple properties, entity architecture is a critical tax planning tool. Each LLC is a separate legal entity — protecting your other assets if one property faces a lawsuit. But multiple LLCs also mean multiple tax filings, multiple state fees, and more complexity. The optimal structure depends on your portfolio size, risk tolerance, and tax situation. KDA’s Irvine real estate CPA team will design an entity architecture that balances liability protection, tax efficiency, and administrative simplicity — and will restructure your existing holdings if needed.
Tax Savings Potential for Irvine Real Estate Investors
| Strategy | Typical Savings for Irvine Investors | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Cost Segregation + Bonus Depreciation | $84,000–$189,000 first-year deduction | Any rental property over $300K |
| Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) | $63,000–$126,000/yr in unlocked losses | Investors with 750+ RE hours |
| Short-Term Rental Loophole | $63,000–$126,000/yr offsetting W-2 income | High-income W-2 employees |
| 1031 Exchange | $210,000–$420,000 deferred on sale | Any property sale with gain |
| QBI Deduction | 20% of net rental income | Qualifying rental businesses |
Why Irvine Real Estate Investors Choose KDA Inc.
KDA Inc. is a specialized real estate tax advisory firm serving Irvine investors with the full range of real estate CPA services: cost segregation analysis, 1031 exchange planning, REPS qualification, STR loophole strategy, entity structuring, and year-round proactive tax planning. Our Irvine real estate CPA team combines deep knowledge of one of Southern California’s most desirable markets with strong appreciation and low vacancy with sophisticated federal and state tax strategies to minimize your tax bill and maximize your after-tax returns. Schedule a free consultation today to discover how much you could be saving.
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “FAQPage”,
“mainEntity”: [
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What are passive activity loss rules and how do they affect real estate investors?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Passive activity loss rules are why most real estate investors can’t simply deduct rental losses against their W-2 income. The rules create a ‘passive loss bucket’ — losses accumulate but can’t be used until you have passive income or sell the property. The exceptions are: (1) the $25,000 allowance for active participants with AGI under $100,000; (2) REPS qualification; and (3) the STR loophole. KDA’s Irvine real estate CPA team will analyze your passive loss position and identify the most efficient path to unlocking those deductions.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How should I structure my real estate portfolio across multiple LLCs?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The optimal LLC structure for a Irvine real estate portfolio depends on your liability exposure, financing needs, and tax strategy. Common approaches: (1) one LLC per property — maximum liability protection but administrative complexity; (2) portfolio LLC — all properties in one LLC, simpler but cross-liability risk; (3) series LLC (available in some states) — one LLC with separate ‘series’ for each property, combining protection and simplicity; (4) holding company structure — a parent LLC holding multiple property LLCs. KDA’s Irvine team will design the right structure for your portfolio size and risk tolerance.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How does California’s Prop 13 affect real estate investment strategy?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Proposition 13 limits California property tax increases to 2% per year and resets the assessed value to current market value only upon a change of ownership. This creates a significant ‘lock-in’ effect — long-term Irvine property owners with low assessed values have a major tax advantage over new buyers. It also affects investment strategy: selling a low-Prop-13-basis property triggers reassessment for the buyer, but a 1031 exchange preserves the seller’s deferred gain while the buyer gets a new assessed value. KDA’s team incorporates Prop 13 analysis into every Irvine investment decision.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “Should I hold my rental properties in an LLC?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “LLCs are often oversold as tax-saving vehicles for rental property owners — they are not. The tax treatment of a single-member LLC is identical to direct ownership. The value of an LLC is liability protection. For tax optimization, the strategies that matter are depreciation elections, REPS or STR loophole qualification, 1031 exchange planning, and entity elections (S-Corp) for active real estate businesses. KDA’s Irvine real estate CPA team will design the right structure for both liability protection and tax optimization.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How do I handle the tax implications of a short sale or foreclosure on rental property?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “A short sale or foreclosure on rental property creates two potential tax events: (1) cancellation of debt (COD) income — if the lender forgives debt exceeding the property’s value, the forgiven amount is generally taxable income; (2) gain or loss on the disposition — calculated as the difference between the debt discharged (the ‘amount realized’) and your adjusted basis. For Irvine investors, the COD income may be excludable if you’re insolvent at the time of the foreclosure (the insolvency exclusion). KDA’s team will calculate your tax exposure from a short sale or foreclosure and identify all available exclusions.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is the fix-and-flip tax treatment and how is it different from buy-and-hold?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Fix-and-flip properties are treated fundamentally differently from buy-and-hold rentals under the tax code. Flippers are classified as ‘dealers’ — the properties are inventory, not capital assets. This means: (1) profits are taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%), not capital gains (15–20%); (2) self-employment tax (15.3%) applies to net profits; (3) no 1031 exchange eligibility; (4) no depreciation deductions. The combined federal tax rate on flip profits can reach 52%+. KDA’s Irvine team structures flipping operations through S-Corps or LLCs to minimize self-employment tax and maximize deductions.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What are the tax benefits of investing in commercial real estate vs. residential?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Commercial real estate (office, retail, industrial, multifamily 5+) offers several tax advantages over residential rentals. Key differences: (1) Commercial property depreciates over 39 years (vs. 27.5 for residential), but cost segregation studies typically reclassify 20–40% of commercial property value to 5, 7, or 15-year property — generating massive first-year deductions with bonus depreciation; (2) Commercial leases often require tenants to pay operating expenses (triple-net leases), simplifying your tax reporting; (3) Commercial properties often have higher income, making the QBI deduction more valuable. KDA’s Irvine team advises on both residential and commercial real estate tax strategy.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is depreciation recapture and how do I minimize it?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Depreciation recapture is the tax you pay when you sell a property for more than its depreciated book value. The IRS ‘recaptures’ the depreciation deductions you took over the years and taxes them at up to 25% (Section 1250 recapture rate). If you used cost segregation and bonus depreciation aggressively, your recapture exposure can be significant. The primary strategies to minimize recapture are: (1) 1031 exchange — defer all gain and recapture indefinitely; (2) hold until death — heirs receive a stepped-up basis eliminating recapture; (3) installment sale — spread recapture over multiple years. KDA’s Irvine team plans for recapture from day one of ownership.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How does California treat rental income from out-of-state investors?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “California’s ‘source income’ rules mean that owning rental property in Irvine creates a California tax filing obligation regardless of your state of residence. If you live in Arizona and own a rental property in Los Angeles, you owe California income tax on the rental income and capital gains from that property. The good news: you’ll receive a credit in your home state for taxes paid to California, reducing (but not eliminating) double taxation. KDA’s team handles multi-state real estate tax returns and ensures optimal credit allocation.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How does estate planning interact with real estate investing?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Real estate is one of the most estate-tax-efficient assets to hold and transfer. The key strategies: (1) Stepped-up basis at death — heirs receive your property at its fair market value on your death date, eliminating all accumulated capital gains and depreciation recapture; (2) 1031 exchange + hold until death — defer all gains through 1031 exchanges, then die holding the property for a complete tax elimination; (3) Irrevocable trusts — remove appreciating real estate from your taxable estate while maintaining some control; (4) Family limited partnerships — transfer real estate to children at a valuation discount. KDA’s Irvine team works with estate planning attorneys to integrate real estate into your estate plan.”
}
}
]
}
Frequently Asked Questions — Real Estate CPA in Irvine
Our real estate CPA team in Irvine answers the questions investors ask most. Every answer reflects current 2026 tax law, including the One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s permanent restoration of 100% bonus depreciation.
What are passive activity loss rules and how do they affect real estate investors?
Passive activity loss rules are why most real estate investors can’t simply deduct rental losses against their W-2 income. The rules create a ‘passive loss bucket’ — losses accumulate but can’t be used until you have passive income or sell the property. The exceptions are: (1) the $25,000 allowance for active participants with AGI under $100,000; (2) REPS qualification; and (3) the STR loophole. KDA’s Irvine real estate CPA team will analyze your passive loss position and identify the most efficient path to unlocking those deductions.
How should I structure my real estate portfolio across multiple LLCs?
The optimal LLC structure for a Irvine real estate portfolio depends on your liability exposure, financing needs, and tax strategy. Common approaches: (1) one LLC per property — maximum liability protection but administrative complexity; (2) portfolio LLC — all properties in one LLC, simpler but cross-liability risk; (3) series LLC (available in some states) — one LLC with separate ‘series’ for each property, combining protection and simplicity; (4) holding company structure — a parent LLC holding multiple property LLCs. KDA’s Irvine team will design the right structure for your portfolio size and risk tolerance.
How does California’s Prop 13 affect real estate investment strategy?
Proposition 13 limits California property tax increases to 2% per year and resets the assessed value to current market value only upon a change of ownership. This creates a significant ‘lock-in’ effect — long-term Irvine property owners with low assessed values have a major tax advantage over new buyers. It also affects investment strategy: selling a low-Prop-13-basis property triggers reassessment for the buyer, but a 1031 exchange preserves the seller’s deferred gain while the buyer gets a new assessed value. KDA’s team incorporates Prop 13 analysis into every Irvine investment decision.
Should I hold my rental properties in an LLC?
LLCs are often oversold as tax-saving vehicles for rental property owners — they are not. The tax treatment of a single-member LLC is identical to direct ownership. The value of an LLC is liability protection. For tax optimization, the strategies that matter are depreciation elections, REPS or STR loophole qualification, 1031 exchange planning, and entity elections (S-Corp) for active real estate businesses. KDA’s Irvine real estate CPA team will design the right structure for both liability protection and tax optimization.
How do I handle the tax implications of a short sale or foreclosure on rental property?
A short sale or foreclosure on rental property creates two potential tax events: (1) cancellation of debt (COD) income — if the lender forgives debt exceeding the property’s value, the forgiven amount is generally taxable income; (2) gain or loss on the disposition — calculated as the difference between the debt discharged (the ‘amount realized’) and your adjusted basis. For Irvine investors, the COD income may be excludable if you’re insolvent at the time of the foreclosure (the insolvency exclusion). KDA’s team will calculate your tax exposure from a short sale or foreclosure and identify all available exclusions.
What is the fix-and-flip tax treatment and how is it different from buy-and-hold?
Fix-and-flip properties are treated fundamentally differently from buy-and-hold rentals under the tax code. Flippers are classified as ‘dealers’ — the properties are inventory, not capital assets. This means: (1) profits are taxed as ordinary income (up to 37%), not capital gains (15–20%); (2) self-employment tax (15.3%) applies to net profits; (3) no 1031 exchange eligibility; (4) no depreciation deductions. The combined federal tax rate on flip profits can reach 52%+. KDA’s Irvine team structures flipping operations through S-Corps or LLCs to minimize self-employment tax and maximize deductions.
What are the tax benefits of investing in commercial real estate vs. residential?
Commercial real estate (office, retail, industrial, multifamily 5+) offers several tax advantages over residential rentals. Key differences: (1) Commercial property depreciates over 39 years (vs. 27.5 for residential), but cost segregation studies typically reclassify 20–40% of commercial property value to 5, 7, or 15-year property — generating massive first-year deductions with bonus depreciation; (2) Commercial leases often require tenants to pay operating expenses (triple-net leases), simplifying your tax reporting; (3) Commercial properties often have higher income, making the QBI deduction more valuable. KDA’s Irvine team advises on both residential and commercial real estate tax strategy.
What is depreciation recapture and how do I minimize it?
Depreciation recapture is the tax you pay when you sell a property for more than its depreciated book value. The IRS ‘recaptures’ the depreciation deductions you took over the years and taxes them at up to 25% (Section 1250 recapture rate). If you used cost segregation and bonus depreciation aggressively, your recapture exposure can be significant. The primary strategies to minimize recapture are: (1) 1031 exchange — defer all gain and recapture indefinitely; (2) hold until death — heirs receive a stepped-up basis eliminating recapture; (3) installment sale — spread recapture over multiple years. KDA’s Irvine team plans for recapture from day one of ownership.
How does California treat rental income from out-of-state investors?
California’s ‘source income’ rules mean that owning rental property in Irvine creates a California tax filing obligation regardless of your state of residence. If you live in Arizona and own a rental property in Los Angeles, you owe California income tax on the rental income and capital gains from that property. The good news: you’ll receive a credit in your home state for taxes paid to California, reducing (but not eliminating) double taxation. KDA’s team handles multi-state real estate tax returns and ensures optimal credit allocation.
How does estate planning interact with real estate investing?
Real estate is one of the most estate-tax-efficient assets to hold and transfer. The key strategies: (1) Stepped-up basis at death — heirs receive your property at its fair market value on your death date, eliminating all accumulated capital gains and depreciation recapture; (2) 1031 exchange + hold until death — defer all gains through 1031 exchanges, then die holding the property for a complete tax elimination; (3) Irrevocable trusts — remove appreciating real estate from your taxable estate while maintaining some control; (4) Family limited partnerships — transfer real estate to children at a valuation discount. KDA’s Irvine team works with estate planning attorneys to integrate real estate into your estate plan.
Ready to Minimize Your Irvine Real Estate Taxes?
KDA Inc.’s specialized real estate CPA team serves Irvine investors with proactive, year-round tax planning. Schedule a free consultation to discover how much you could be saving through cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, and the STR loophole.
Serving Irvine and all of California — in-person and remote consultations available.