CA Real Estate CPA
Real Estate CPA in Culver City
Specialized tax strategy for California real estate investors — cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, and the STR loophole. Stop overpaying taxes and start building real wealth.
100%
Bonus Depreciation
(OBBBA 2025)
13.3% CA Tax
State Tax Context
$500,000
Median Home Value
Free
Initial Consultation
Schedule Free Consultation →
No obligation • In-person & remote available • California specialists
✓ Specialized Real Estate CPA
✓ Cost Segregation Experts
✓ 1031 Exchange Planning
✓ REPS & STR Loophole
✓ Year-Round Proactive Planning
Why Culver City Real Estate Investors Need a Specialized CPA
California’s tax environment makes specialized real estate CPA services in Culver City essential, not optional. With a 13.3% top state income tax rate stacked on top of federal rates, Culver City real estate investors who rely on a generalist CPA are almost certainly overpaying by tens of thousands of dollars annually. KDA Inc. brings institutional-level real estate tax expertise to Culver City investors: cost segregation studies, 1031 exchange planning, REPS qualification, the short-term rental loophole, and proactive entity structuring designed to protect your wealth and minimize your tax bill.
Common Tax Mistakes Culver City Real Estate Investors Make
Real estate investors in Culver City consistently leave money on the table by making the same tax mistakes: not performing cost segregation studies on investment properties, missing REPS or STR loophole qualification, selling properties without 1031 exchanges, and using the wrong entity structure. These aren’t obscure strategies — they’re the core toolkit of every sophisticated real estate investor. The difference between a generalist CPA and a specialized real estate CPA in Culver City is knowing which strategies apply to your situation and implementing them correctly. KDA’s team will conduct a comprehensive review of your current tax situation and identify every opportunity you’re missing.
Cost Segregation: The Foundation of Real Estate Tax Strategy in Culver City
Cost segregation is the most powerful tax strategy available to Culver City real estate investors. A cost segregation study reclassifies components of your property from 27.5-year (residential) or 39-year (commercial) depreciation schedules to 5, 7, or 15-year schedules — dramatically accelerating your depreciation deductions. With the One Big Beautiful Bill Act restoring 100% bonus depreciation in 2025, a cost segregation study on a $500,000 Culver City property can generate $40,000–$90,000 in first-year deductions, creating significant tax savings in the year of purchase. KDA’s Culver City real estate CPA team coordinates with qualified cost segregation engineers to maximize every dollar of accelerated depreciation on your properties.
REPS and the STR Loophole: Unlocking Real Estate Losses in Culver City
For high-income Culver City real estate investors, the combination of REPS and the STR loophole can be transformative. Real Estate Professional Status allows investors who spend 750+ hours annually in real estate activities — and more time in real estate than any other profession — to treat rental losses as active losses, offsetting W-2 income and business income directly. The short-term rental loophole provides a similar benefit for STR operators, without the 750-hour requirement. A Culver City investor with $200,000 in W-2 income and $50,000 in rental losses could save $20,000–$30,000 annually by qualifying for one of these strategies. KDA’s team will assess your eligibility and implement the documentation required to support these positions.
1031 Exchanges: Building Generational Wealth in Culver City
Timing and structuring a 1031 exchange correctly is critical — and the consequences of getting it wrong are severe. Miss the 45-day identification deadline? The exchange fails and you owe all deferred taxes immediately. Receive any ‘boot’ (cash or non-like-kind property)? That portion is immediately taxable. KDA’s Culver City team manages every aspect of your 1031 exchange: calculating the required reinvestment amount, identifying qualified replacement properties, coordinating with your qualified intermediary, and ensuring all deadlines are met. We’ve managed hundreds of 1031 exchanges for Culver City investors without a single failed exchange.
Entity Structure for Culver City Real Estate Investors
The right entity structure for your Culver City rental properties depends on your portfolio size, liability exposure, and tax situation. For most investors, a single-member LLC provides liability protection without changing the tax treatment (it’s a disregarded entity for tax purposes). As your portfolio grows, a Series LLC or multiple LLCs may be appropriate to isolate liability between properties. For investors with active real estate businesses, an S-Corp may provide self-employment tax savings. KDA’s Culver City real estate CPA team will design the optimal entity structure for your current portfolio and scale it as you grow.
Tax Savings Potential for Culver City Real Estate Investors
The table below shows typical annual tax savings for Culver City investors using KDA’s core strategies. Actual savings depend on your portfolio size, income level, and specific situation.
| Strategy |
Typical Savings — Culver City Investors |
Best For |
| Cost Segregation + Bonus Depreciation |
$40,000–$90,000 first-year deduction |
Any rental property over $300K |
| Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) |
$30,000–$60,000/yr in unlocked losses |
Investors with 750+ RE hours |
| Short-Term Rental Loophole |
$30,000–$60,000/yr offsetting W-2 income |
High-income W-2 employees |
| 1031 Exchange |
$100,000–$200,000 deferred on sale |
Any property sale with gain |
| QBI Deduction (Section 199A) |
20% of net rental income |
Qualifying rental businesses |
Why Culver City Real Estate Investors Choose KDA Inc.
The best real estate CPA in Culver City is one who proactively identifies tax savings opportunities before they expire — not one who simply reports what happened last year. KDA Inc.’s Culver City real estate CPA team provides quarterly tax planning reviews, proactive strategy recommendations, and year-round availability to answer your questions. We serve real estate investors throughout Culver City and the surrounding area. Our clients typically save $30,000–$150,000 annually through the combination of cost segregation, REPS/STR, 1031 exchanges, and proactive entity structuring. Schedule your free consultation today and discover the KDA difference.
Frequently Asked Questions — Real Estate CPA in Culver City
Our real estate CPA team in Culver City 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 is depreciation recapture and how do I minimize it?
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Depreciation recapture is the ‘tax debt’ you accumulate as you take depreciation deductions. When you sell, the IRS taxes recaptured depreciation at 25% — higher than the 15–20% long-term capital gains rate. On a property where you’ve taken $200,000 in depreciation, that’s $50,000 in recapture tax. The best minimization strategy is a 1031 exchange, which defers both capital gains and recapture indefinitely. KDA’s Culver City team models your recapture exposure and builds exit strategies into your plan from the beginning.
What is a ground lease and how is it taxed?
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A ground lease is a long-term lease (typically 50–100 years) of land, where the tenant constructs and owns the improvements. For the landowner, ground lease income is taxed as ordinary rental income. The landowner does not depreciate the land (land is never depreciable) but can deduct expenses related to the lease. For the tenant (the developer), the improvements are depreciated over their useful life, and ground lease payments are deductible as rent. Ground leases are common in Culver City commercial real estate markets and can be an excellent passive income strategy for landowners. KDA’s team advises both ground lessors and lessees on tax optimization.
How do I handle the tax implications of a short sale or foreclosure on rental property?
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Short sales and foreclosures are complex tax events for Culver City rental property owners. The key issues: (1) recourse vs. non-recourse debt — non-recourse debt discharge is treated as sale proceeds (no COD income); recourse debt forgiveness creates COD income; (2) the insolvency exclusion — if your liabilities exceed your assets at the time of discharge, COD income is excluded to the extent of insolvency; (3) gain or loss calculation — the amount realized equals the debt discharged, which may create a taxable gain even if you received no cash. KDA’s Culver City team will navigate all these issues and minimize your tax liability.
How can I minimize taxes when I sell my rental property outright?
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If you decide to sell a Culver City rental property outright (without a 1031 exchange), the strategies to minimize taxes include: (1) maximize your adjusted basis — ensure all capital improvements are properly documented and added to basis; (2) time the sale in a low-income year to minimize the capital gains rate; (3) use an installment sale to spread the gain over multiple years; (4) apply suspended passive losses to offset the gain; (5) harvest capital losses from other investments to offset the gain; and (6) consider a charitable remainder trust if you have charitable intent. KDA’s team will model all options before you sign any sale agreement.
What is a 1031 exchange and how can a CPA help me use it?
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A 1031 exchange (named after IRC Section 1031) allows real estate investors to sell an investment property and defer all capital gains taxes and depreciation recapture by reinvesting the proceeds into a like-kind replacement property. There is no limit on how many times you can exchange, meaning you can defer taxes indefinitely and build wealth on a pre-tax basis. KDA’s Culver City real estate CPA team plans 1031 exchanges from the moment you acquire a property — not just when you’re ready to sell — to ensure you maximize the tax deferral.
What expenses can I deduct for my Airbnb or short-term rental property?
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The deduction list for a Culver City STR is extensive: platform fees (Airbnb/VRBO typically charges 3%), cleaning fees you pay, all utilities, internet, cable, furnishings (100% bonus depreciation in 2026), appliances, maintenance and repairs, property management, insurance, mortgage interest, property taxes, depreciation on the building, and a cost segregation study to accelerate depreciation on building components. If you have a home office for managing your STR, that’s deductible too. KDA’s team will conduct a full deduction audit to ensure you’re capturing everything.
What is the 14-day rule for vacation rental properties?
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The 14-day rule (also called the vacation home rule) applies when you use a rental property personally for more than 14 days OR more than 10% of the days it’s rented, whichever is greater. If you exceed this threshold, the property is classified as a ‘vacation home’ — deductions are limited to rental income (you cannot generate a loss), and the property may not qualify for the STR loophole. KDA’s Culver City team tracks personal use days carefully for STR clients and advises on how to stay below the threshold to preserve full deductibility.
How much can I save with a cost segregation study on my rental property?
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For a typical $750,000 rental property in Culver City, a cost segregation study combined with 100% bonus depreciation (restored in 2025) can generate $150,000–$225,000 in first-year deductions — translating to $55,000–$83,000 in tax savings at a 37% rate. The study itself costs $3,000–$8,000, making the ROI extraordinary. KDA’s Culver City team will run a free preliminary analysis to show you your specific savings potential before you commit.
What is the difference between Section 179 and bonus depreciation for real estate?
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The key practical difference: Section 179 cannot create a tax loss, while bonus depreciation can. For real estate investors in Culver City who want to maximize first-year deductions and potentially generate a net operating loss to offset W-2 or business income (through REPS or STR loophole), bonus depreciation is the superior tool. Section 179 is more commonly used for equipment and vehicles in operating businesses. KDA’s Culver City team will determine the optimal depreciation strategy for your specific portfolio.
What does a real estate CPA do that a regular CPA doesn’t?
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The difference comes down to proactive strategy versus reactive compliance. A regular CPA files what happened. A real estate CPA at KDA Inc. plans what will happen — structuring your acquisitions, timing your cost segregation studies, advising on 1031 exchanges before you sell, and ensuring your entity structure maximizes every deduction available under the tax code. For Culver City investors, that difference is often tens of thousands of dollars annually.
Ready to Minimize Your Culver City Real Estate Taxes?
KDA Inc.’s specialized real estate CPA team serves Culver City 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 Culver City and all of California • In-person & remote consultations available • 1 (800) 878-4051