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AZ Real Estate CPA

Real Estate CPA in Green Valley

Specialized tax strategy for Arizona 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)

2.5% AZ Tax
State Tax Context

$400,000
Median Home Value

Free
Initial Consultation

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No obligation • In-person & remote available • Arizona specialists

Specialized Real Estate CPA
Cost Segregation Experts
1031 Exchange Planning
REPS & STR Loophole
Year-Round Proactive Planning

Why Green Valley Real Estate Investors Need a Specialized CPA

Real estate investors in Green Valley benefit from Arizona’s favorable 2.5% flat tax rate, but federal taxes remain a significant drag on returns without proper planning. A specialized real estate CPA in Green Valley understands how to layer federal tax strategies — cost segregation, bonus depreciation, REPS, the STR loophole, 1031 exchanges — on top of Arizona’s tax advantages to create a comprehensive tax minimization strategy. KDA Inc. serves Green Valley investors with institutional-level real estate tax expertise and proactive year-round advisory.

Common Tax Mistakes Green Valley Real Estate Investors Make

Real estate investors in Green Valley 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 Green Valley 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 Green Valley

Cost segregation is the most powerful tax strategy available to Green Valley 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 $400,000 Green Valley property can generate $40,000–$90,000 in first-year deductions, creating significant tax savings in the year of purchase. KDA’s Green Valley 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 Green Valley

For high-income Green Valley 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 Green Valley 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 Green Valley

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 Green Valley 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 Green Valley investors without a single failed exchange.

Entity Structure for Green Valley Real Estate Investors

The right entity structure for your Green Valley 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 Green Valley real estate CPA team will design the optimal entity structure for your current portfolio and scale it as you grow.

Tax Savings Potential for Green Valley Real Estate Investors

The table below shows typical annual tax savings for Green Valley investors using KDA’s core strategies. Actual savings depend on your portfolio size, income level, and specific situation.

Strategy Typical Savings — Green Valley Investors Best For
Cost Segregation + Bonus Depreciation $32,000–$72,000 first-year deduction Any rental property over $300K
Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) $24,000–$48,000/yr in unlocked losses Investors with 750+ RE hours
Short-Term Rental Loophole $24,000–$48,000/yr offsetting W-2 income High-income W-2 employees
1031 Exchange $80,000–$160,000 deferred on sale Any property sale with gain
QBI Deduction (Section 199A) 20% of net rental income Qualifying rental businesses

Why Green Valley Real Estate Investors Choose KDA Inc.

The best real estate CPA in Green Valley is one who proactively identifies tax savings opportunities before they expire — not one who simply reports what happened last year. KDA Inc.’s Green Valley 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 Green Valley 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 Green Valley

Our real estate CPA team in Green Valley 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.

How do I handle real estate investments in a divorce?
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Real estate division in a Green Valley divorce requires careful tax analysis because the ‘equal’ division of assets is rarely equal on an after-tax basis. A property worth $1M with a $200,000 basis (significant accumulated depreciation) has a much larger embedded tax liability than a property worth $1M with a $900,000 basis. The receiving spouse inherits the low basis and will owe taxes on the full gain when they eventually sell. KDA’s team will calculate the after-tax value of each property and help you negotiate a truly equal settlement.

What are the deadlines for a 1031 exchange?
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Missing a 1031 exchange deadline is catastrophic — it triggers full capital gains tax and depreciation recapture with no exceptions. The 45-day identification window is especially tight in competitive markets like Green Valley. KDA’s team recommends beginning your replacement property search before you list your relinquished property, so you have identified candidates ready the moment you close. We coordinate with your qualified intermediary and real estate agent to keep the timeline on track.

How do I calculate my basis in a rental property?
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Calculating basis for a Green Valley rental property requires tracking several components: (1) original purchase price plus closing costs; (2) plus capital improvements over the ownership period; (3) minus accumulated depreciation (including cost segregation deductions); (4) minus any casualty losses claimed. The resulting ‘adjusted basis’ determines your taxable gain when you sell. Many investors underestimate their accumulated depreciation, leading to surprise tax bills at sale. KDA’s team maintains detailed basis schedules and models your gain exposure annually.

How does the One Big Beautiful Bill Act affect real estate investors in 2026?
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The OBBBA’s permanent 100% bonus depreciation is the biggest win for Green Valley real estate investors in years. Previously, investors were racing to do cost segregation studies before bonus depreciation phased down. Now it’s permanent — you can take 100% first-year deductions on qualifying short-life assets indefinitely. Combined with the permanent QBI deduction and permanent TCJA rate structure, the OBBBA creates a stable, investor-friendly tax environment. KDA’s Green Valley team will show you exactly how to deploy these provisions in your 2026 tax strategy.

What is an installment sale and when does it make sense for real estate?
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Installment sales make the most sense when: (1) you can’t find a suitable 1031 replacement property; (2) you want to generate passive income from the sale proceeds; (3) spreading the gain over multiple years keeps you in lower tax brackets; or (4) you’re approaching retirement and want to match income recognition with your lower-income years. KDA’s Green Valley real estate CPA team has structured installment sales for dozens of investors and will show you exactly how the tax math works for your specific property.

What is an opportunity zone investment and how does it compare to a 1031 exchange?
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Qualified Opportunity Zone (QOZ) investments allow you to defer and potentially reduce capital gains by investing in designated low-income census tracts. Key differences from a 1031 exchange: (1) QOZ investments can be funded with any capital gain (stocks, business sales, crypto) — not just real estate proceeds; (2) QOZ defers the original gain until 2026 (or when you sell the QOZ investment); (3) If you hold the QOZ investment for 10+ years, ALL appreciation in the QOZ investment is tax-free. The 1031 exchange defers the original gain indefinitely but doesn’t eliminate it. For Green Valley investors with large non-real estate gains, a QOZ investment can be more powerful than a 1031 exchange.

What is a 721 exchange and how does it work for real estate investors?
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The 721 exchange is an advanced exit strategy for Green Valley real estate investors who want to: (1) defer capital gains tax; (2) exit active property management; (3) diversify into a large institutional real estate portfolio; and (4) maintain liquidity through publicly traded REIT shares. By contributing your property to a REIT’s operating partnership, you receive OP units (tax-deferred) that can be converted to REIT shares over time. KDA’s real estate CPA team will model the 721 exchange alongside 1031 exchanges and DST investments to find the optimal exit strategy.

Do I need a specialized real estate CPA or will any CPA do?
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The IRS tax code contains hundreds of provisions specifically designed for real estate investors. A general CPA may know 10–20% of them. A real estate CPA at KDA knows all of them and applies them proactively to your portfolio. In Green Valley’s competitive real estate market, the investors who win long-term are the ones with the best tax strategy — and that requires a specialist.

What is a Delaware Statutory Trust (DST) and how does it work in a 1031 exchange?
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A DST solves the biggest challenge of a 1031 exchange: finding a suitable replacement property within 45 days. By investing in a DST, you immediately satisfy the identification requirement while deferring all taxes. DSTs offer access to institutional properties — class A apartments, Amazon distribution centers, net-lease pharmacies — that individual investors couldn’t access directly. The trade-off is passive ownership with no control. For Green Valley investors looking to exit active management while deferring taxes, a DST is often the optimal 1031 exchange strategy. KDA’s team will guide you through the DST selection process.

What is the fix-and-flip tax treatment and how is it different from buy-and-hold?
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The tax treatment of fix-and-flip vs. buy-and-hold is dramatically different. Buy-and-hold: capital gains rates, depreciation deductions, 1031 exchange eligibility, stepped-up basis at death. Fix-and-flip: ordinary income rates, no depreciation, no 1031, self-employment tax. For Green Valley investors doing both, it’s critical to keep the activities legally separate — mixing dealer and investor activities can taint your buy-and-hold properties with dealer status. KDA’s real estate CPA team structures flipping and investing activities in separate entities to protect each strategy.

Ready to Minimize Your Green Valley Real Estate Taxes?

KDA Inc.’s specialized real estate CPA team serves Green Valley 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.

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Serving Green Valley and all of Arizona • In-person & remote consultations available • 1 (800) 878-4051

Real Estate CPA FAQ — Green Valley, CA

Does KDA Inc. handle 1031 exchanges for real estate investors?

Yes. KDA Inc. has guided clients through 1031 like-kind exchanges since 1993, helping them defer capital gains taxes and reinvest into higher-value properties. We coordinate with qualified intermediaries and ensure full IRS compliance.

What is cost segregation and how can it reduce my tax bill?

Cost segregation is an IRS-approved strategy that reclassifies building components (fixtures, land improvements, personal property) to shorter depreciation schedules — typically 5, 7, or 15 years instead of 27.5 or 39 years. KDA Inc. performs cost segregation studies that routinely generate $50,000–$500,000+ in accelerated deductions for real estate investors.

Can KDA Inc. help me qualify as a Real Estate Professional for tax purposes?

Yes. Qualifying as a Real Estate Professional (REP) under IRC §469 allows you to deduct rental losses against ordinary income with no passive activity limitation. KDA Inc. helps clients document the required 750+ hours and material participation tests to unlock this powerful status.

How does KDA Inc. structure real estate entities to minimize taxes?

KDA Inc. analyzes each client’s portfolio to recommend the optimal entity structure — LLC, S-Corp, C-Corp, or a combination — to minimize self-employment tax, maximize deductions, and protect assets. We also advise on Series LLC structures for multi-property investors.

Does KDA Inc. provide IRS audit representation for real estate investors?

Yes. Our IRS Enrolled Agents provide full audit representation for real estate investors, including passive activity audits, depreciation recapture disputes, and 1031 exchange compliance reviews. Contact us at 1 (800) 878-4051.

Real Estate CPA Services — Green Valley, CA

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