[FREE GUIDE] TAX SECRETS FOR THE SELF EMPLOYED Download

{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “ProfessionalService”,
“name”: “KDA Inc. u2014 Real Estate CPA Ontario”,
“description”: “Specialized real estate CPA services for Ontario, California investors. Cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, STR loophole, and entity structuring.”,
“url”: “https://kdainc.com/real-estate-cpa-ontario-ca”,
“telephone”: “+1-800-KDA-TAXES”,
“areaServed”: {
“@type”: “City”,
“name”: “Ontario”,
“containedInPlace”: {
“@type”: “State”,
“name”: “California”
},
“postalCode”: “91761”
},
“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”
]
}

CA Real Estate CPA

Real Estate CPA in Ontario 91761

Specialized tax strategy for California real estate investors — cost segregation, 1031 exchanges, REPS, and the STR loophole.

100%Bonus Depreciation (OBBBA)
13.3% CA TaxState Tax Context
$500,000Median Home Value
FreeInitial Consultation

Schedule Free Consultation

If you own rental property in Ontario, you need more than a general accountant. You need a real estate CPA who understands a growing California real estate market, 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 Ontario

For Ontario 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 $500,000 property in Ontario, 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 Ontario properties.

REPS and the STR Loophole: Unlocking Real Estate Losses in Ontario

Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) is the key that unlocks real estate tax losses for high-income Ontario 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 Ontario 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 Ontario

The 1031 exchange is how Ontario 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 Ontario 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 Ontario Real Estate Investors

For Ontario 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 Ontario 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 Ontario Real Estate Investors

Strategy Typical Savings for Ontario 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 20% of net rental income Qualifying rental businesses

Why Ontario Real Estate Investors Choose KDA Inc.

KDA Inc. is a specialized real estate tax advisory firm serving Ontario 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 Ontario real estate CPA team combines deep knowledge of a growing California real estate market 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 is a Delaware Statutory Trust (DST) and how does it work in a 1031 exchange?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “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 Ontario 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.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “Can a real estate CPA help me if I only own one rental property?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Absolutely. Even a single rental property has significant tax complexity — depreciation schedules, repair vs. improvement rules, passive activity loss limitations, and state-specific filing requirements. KDA’s Ontario team works with single-property landlords and helps them build the right foundation for future growth, including entity structure and record-keeping systems that scale as your portfolio expands.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is the tax treatment of real estate professional fees and commissions?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Transaction costs are one of the most commonly missed deductions for Ontario real estate investors. Buying costs increase your basis (reducing future gain). Selling costs reduce your taxable gain dollar-for-dollar. On a $2M property sale with $100,000 in selling costs, properly capturing those costs saves $20,000–37,000 in taxes. KDA’s Ontario real estate CPA team will review your closing statements, capture all transaction costs, and ensure they’re applied correctly to your basis and gain calculations.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What are the tax benefits of investing in commercial real estate vs. residential?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Commercial real estate tax strategy in Ontario centers on cost segregation and bonus depreciation. While the 39-year depreciation life sounds worse than residential’s 27.5 years, commercial properties typically have more qualifying personal property and land improvements — meaning a larger percentage gets reclassified to 5, 7, or 15-year property in a cost segregation study. With permanent 100% bonus depreciation (OBBBA), this creates enormous first-year deductions. KDA’s Ontario commercial real estate CPA team will maximize your depreciation strategy.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “Does California conform to federal 1031 exchange rules?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “California conforms to IRC Section 1031 for exchanges of California real estate into California replacement property. The complication arises when you exchange out of California into another state — California’s ‘clawback’ law (effective 2014) requires you to file FTB Form 3840 annually and pay California tax when the out-of-state replacement property is eventually sold. This makes exchanging out of California a complex decision that requires careful planning. KDA’s Ontario team will model the California clawback impact before you proceed with any out-of-state exchange.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is bonus depreciation and how does it work for real estate in 2026?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Bonus depreciation allows real estate investors to immediately deduct 100% of qualifying short-life assets (5-, 7-, and 15-year property) in the year they are placed in service, rather than depreciating them over their useful life. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025, permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property acquired after January 19, 2025. This is a massive win for Ontario real estate investors — when combined with a cost segregation study, you can write off $100,000–$300,000+ in year one on a single property.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What credentials should I look for in a real estate CPA?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The key credentials are CPA or EA licensure, real estate specialization, and IRS representation rights. Beyond credentials, look for a firm that does proactive planning year-round — not just tax prep in March. KDA Inc. is a full-service real estate tax advisory firm with licensed CPAs and EAs in Ontario who specialize exclusively in real estate investor tax strategy.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How do I handle rental income and expenses if I own property with a partner?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Co-owned rental properties require careful tax reporting. If you and a partner own property directly (tenants in common), each owner reports their proportionate share of income and expenses on their individual Schedule E. If the property is held in an LLC or partnership, the entity files a partnership return (Form 1065) and issues K-1s to each partner. The K-1 shows each partner’s share of income, losses, depreciation, and other items. For Ontario co-owned properties, KDA’s team will ensure the partnership agreement reflects the intended economic arrangement and that K-1s are issued correctly.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How do I optimize my real estate tax strategy if I’m a high-income W-2 employee?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “For Ontario W-2 employees who invest in real estate, the passive activity rules are the primary obstacle to tax savings. Rental losses are trapped in the passive bucket and can’t offset your salary. The two most effective solutions: (1) the STR loophole — short-term rentals with average stays of 7 days or less, where you materially participate, are non-passive; losses offset W-2 income directly; (2) REPS qualification by a spouse who works 750+ hours in real estate. KDA’s team will determine which strategy is feasible for your situation and design the implementation plan.”
}
}, {
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How do I prove material participation in my short-term rental to the IRS?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Material participation for the STR loophole requires meeting one of seven IRS tests, the most commonly used being: (1) you participated for more than 500 hours during the year; (2) your participation was substantially all the participation in the activity; or (3) you participated for more than 100 hours and no other person participated more than you. The IRS requires contemporaneous documentation — a daily log of your activities, hours spent, and tasks performed. KDA’s Ontario team provides clients with a time-tracking template and conducts quarterly reviews to ensure your documentation will withstand IRS scrutiny.”
}
}
]
}

Frequently Asked Questions — Real Estate CPA in Ontario

Our real estate CPA team in Ontario 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 a Delaware Statutory Trust (DST) and how does it work in a 1031 exchange?

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 Ontario 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.

Can a real estate CPA help me if I only own one rental property?

Absolutely. Even a single rental property has significant tax complexity — depreciation schedules, repair vs. improvement rules, passive activity loss limitations, and state-specific filing requirements. KDA’s Ontario team works with single-property landlords and helps them build the right foundation for future growth, including entity structure and record-keeping systems that scale as your portfolio expands.

What is the tax treatment of real estate professional fees and commissions?

Transaction costs are one of the most commonly missed deductions for Ontario real estate investors. Buying costs increase your basis (reducing future gain). Selling costs reduce your taxable gain dollar-for-dollar. On a $2M property sale with $100,000 in selling costs, properly capturing those costs saves $20,000–37,000 in taxes. KDA’s Ontario real estate CPA team will review your closing statements, capture all transaction costs, and ensure they’re applied correctly to your basis and gain calculations.

What are the tax benefits of investing in commercial real estate vs. residential?

Commercial real estate tax strategy in Ontario centers on cost segregation and bonus depreciation. While the 39-year depreciation life sounds worse than residential’s 27.5 years, commercial properties typically have more qualifying personal property and land improvements — meaning a larger percentage gets reclassified to 5, 7, or 15-year property in a cost segregation study. With permanent 100% bonus depreciation (OBBBA), this creates enormous first-year deductions. KDA’s Ontario commercial real estate CPA team will maximize your depreciation strategy.

Does California conform to federal 1031 exchange rules?

California conforms to IRC Section 1031 for exchanges of California real estate into California replacement property. The complication arises when you exchange out of California into another state — California’s ‘clawback’ law (effective 2014) requires you to file FTB Form 3840 annually and pay California tax when the out-of-state replacement property is eventually sold. This makes exchanging out of California a complex decision that requires careful planning. KDA’s Ontario team will model the California clawback impact before you proceed with any out-of-state exchange.

What is bonus depreciation and how does it work for real estate in 2026?

Bonus depreciation allows real estate investors to immediately deduct 100% of qualifying short-life assets (5-, 7-, and 15-year property) in the year they are placed in service, rather than depreciating them over their useful life. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed July 4, 2025, permanently restored 100% bonus depreciation for qualifying property acquired after January 19, 2025. This is a massive win for Ontario real estate investors — when combined with a cost segregation study, you can write off $100,000–$300,000+ in year one on a single property.

What credentials should I look for in a real estate CPA?

The key credentials are CPA or EA licensure, real estate specialization, and IRS representation rights. Beyond credentials, look for a firm that does proactive planning year-round — not just tax prep in March. KDA Inc. is a full-service real estate tax advisory firm with licensed CPAs and EAs in Ontario who specialize exclusively in real estate investor tax strategy.

How do I handle rental income and expenses if I own property with a partner?

Co-owned rental properties require careful tax reporting. If you and a partner own property directly (tenants in common), each owner reports their proportionate share of income and expenses on their individual Schedule E. If the property is held in an LLC or partnership, the entity files a partnership return (Form 1065) and issues K-1s to each partner. The K-1 shows each partner’s share of income, losses, depreciation, and other items. For Ontario co-owned properties, KDA’s team will ensure the partnership agreement reflects the intended economic arrangement and that K-1s are issued correctly.

How do I optimize my real estate tax strategy if I’m a high-income W-2 employee?

For Ontario W-2 employees who invest in real estate, the passive activity rules are the primary obstacle to tax savings. Rental losses are trapped in the passive bucket and can’t offset your salary. The two most effective solutions: (1) the STR loophole — short-term rentals with average stays of 7 days or less, where you materially participate, are non-passive; losses offset W-2 income directly; (2) REPS qualification by a spouse who works 750+ hours in real estate. KDA’s team will determine which strategy is feasible for your situation and design the implementation plan.

How do I prove material participation in my short-term rental to the IRS?

Material participation for the STR loophole requires meeting one of seven IRS tests, the most commonly used being: (1) you participated for more than 500 hours during the year; (2) your participation was substantially all the participation in the activity; or (3) you participated for more than 100 hours and no other person participated more than you. The IRS requires contemporaneous documentation — a daily log of your activities, hours spent, and tasks performed. KDA’s Ontario team provides clients with a time-tracking template and conducts quarterly reviews to ensure your documentation will withstand IRS scrutiny.

Ready to Minimize Your Ontario Real Estate Taxes?

KDA Inc.’s specialized real estate CPA team serves Ontario 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 Ontario and all of California — in-person and remote consultations available.