[FREE GUIDE] TAX SECRETS FOR THE SELF EMPLOYED Download

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CA Real Estate CPA

Real Estate CPA in San Diego 92145

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
$900,000Median Home Value
FreeInitial Consultation

Schedule Free Consultation

The difference between a general CPA and a specialized real estate CPA in San Diego can be $50,000 or more per year in taxes. a coastal market with strong STR demand and consistent appreciation creates significant appreciation and rental income — and without proactive tax planning, California’s 13.3% top income tax rate will take a disproportionate share of your returns.

Cost Segregation: The Foundation of Real Estate Tax Strategy in San Diego

Cost segregation is the single most powerful tax strategy available to San Diego real estate investors. By engineering a property’s components into shorter depreciation lives (5, 7, or 15 years instead of 27.5 or 39 years), a cost segregation study accelerates hundreds of thousands of dollars in deductions into the first year of ownership. With 100% bonus depreciation now permanently restored under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a San Diego investor who purchases a $900,000 property can generate $80,000–$150,000 in first-year deductions — deductions that directly offset rental income, W-2 income (if you qualify for REPS or the STR loophole), or any other income.

REPS and the STR Loophole: Unlocking Real Estate Losses in San Diego

The short-term rental (STR) loophole is the fastest path to unlocking real estate tax benefits for high-income San Diego investors who can’t qualify for REPS. If your rental property has an average guest stay of 7 days or less AND you materially participate (100+ hours, more than any other person), the rental income is non-passive — losses offset W-2 income directly. A San Diego investor who purchases a short-term rental and runs a cost segregation study can generate $100,000–$300,000 in first-year losses that directly offset their salary. KDA’s team will structure your STR investment to maximize this benefit.

1031 Exchanges: Building Generational Wealth in San Diego

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 San Diego 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 San Diego investors without a single failed exchange.

Entity Structure for San Diego Real Estate Investors

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

Tax Savings Potential for San Diego Real Estate Investors

Strategy Typical Savings for San Diego Investors Best For
Cost Segregation + Bonus Depreciation $72,000–$162,000 first-year deduction Any rental property over $300K
Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) $54,000–$108,000/yr in unlocked losses Investors with 750+ RE hours
Short-Term Rental Loophole $54,000–$108,000/yr offsetting W-2 income High-income W-2 employees
1031 Exchange $180,000–$360,000 deferred on sale Any property sale with gain
QBI Deduction 20% of net rental income Qualifying rental businesses

Why San Diego Real Estate Investors Choose KDA Inc.

Real estate investors in San Diego deserve a CPA who specializes in their asset class — not a generalist who handles a few real estate returns alongside W-2 clients. KDA Inc. is exclusively focused on real estate tax strategy. Our team understands a coastal market with strong STR demand and consistent appreciation, knows every applicable tax strategy, and provides proactive year-round planning — not just annual tax prep. Contact KDA’s San Diego real estate CPA team today for a free consultation and comprehensive tax savings analysis.

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Frequently Asked Questions — Real Estate CPA in San Diego

Our real estate CPA team in San Diego 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?

The passive activity rules are the primary obstacle for real estate investors trying to use rental losses to offset their W-2 income. Under Section 469, rental losses are passive and can only offset passive income — unless you qualify for REPS or the STR loophole. Suspended passive losses accumulate and are released when you sell the property or generate passive income. For San Diego investors with large suspended passive losses, a strategic sale or the right property acquisition can unlock years of accumulated deductions. KDA’s team will model your passive loss position.

How does the at-risk rules limitation affect real estate investors?

The at-risk rules (IRC Section 465) limit your deductible losses to the amount you have ‘at risk’ in the activity — generally your cash investment plus any recourse debt for which you are personally liable. For real estate, qualified nonrecourse financing (loans from commercial lenders secured by the property) is treated as at-risk, which is a special exception that makes real estate more favorable than other investments. Most San Diego real estate investors are not limited by the at-risk rules because their mortgage debt qualifies as at-risk. KDA’s team will confirm your at-risk status and ensure your losses are fully deductible.

What happens to my rental property losses when I sell the property?

The sale of a rental property triggers the release of all suspended passive losses from that property — a potentially significant tax benefit for San Diego investors. If you’ve owned a property for 10 years with $200,000 in suspended passive losses (because your AGI was too high to use them), those losses are released upon sale and can offset the capital gain, depreciation recapture, or any other income. KDA’s team maintains a passive loss tracking schedule for every client property and factors the suspended loss release into your sale planning.

How do I calculate my basis in a rental property?

Basis tracking is one of the most important — and most neglected — aspects of real estate tax planning for San Diego investors. Your adjusted basis determines your taxable gain on sale, and errors in basis calculation can cost you thousands in unnecessary taxes or trigger IRS scrutiny. KDA’s real estate CPA team maintains a complete basis schedule for every client property, tracking purchase price, closing costs, capital improvements, and accumulated depreciation from day one through eventual sale.

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

The IRS scrutinizes STR loophole claims closely, so documentation is critical. You need a contemporaneous time log — kept in real time, not reconstructed after the fact — recording every hour spent on your rental: guest communication, cleaning coordination, maintenance, bookkeeping, marketing, and property management. For the 100-hour test (the most accessible), you need to document that you spent at least 100 hours AND more hours than any other person (including your property manager). KDA’s San Diego team will set up your documentation system and review it quarterly.

Should I use an S-Corp for my real estate investing business?

The S-Corp question for real estate investors in San Diego requires careful analysis. For fix-and-flip investors who are treated as dealers by the IRS (ordinary income, self-employment tax), an S-Corp can save 15.3% in SE tax on a reasonable salary allocation. For buy-and-hold rental investors, S-Corps create significant disadvantages. KDA’s team will analyze your specific mix of active and passive real estate activities and recommend the entity structure that minimizes your total tax burden.

How does estate planning interact with real estate investing?

Real estate estate planning for San Diego investors involves three key decisions: (1) how to hold the property (direct, LLC, trust) for optimal estate tax treatment; (2) whether to use lifetime gifting strategies (GRATs, FLPs) to transfer appreciation out of your estate; and (3) how to coordinate real estate with your overall estate plan. The OBBBA increased the estate tax exemption, reducing estate tax exposure for most investors. But for large portfolios, irrevocable trusts and FLPs remain powerful tools. KDA’s San Diego real estate CPA team works alongside your estate planning attorney to optimize the real estate component of your estate plan.

Do I need a specialized real estate CPA or will any CPA do?

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 San Diego’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 charitable remainder trust (CRT) and how can it help real estate investors?

A Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) is an irrevocable trust that allows you to donate highly appreciated real estate to the trust, avoid immediate capital gains tax, receive an income stream for life (or a term of years), and take a partial charitable deduction. The trust sells the property tax-free, reinvests the proceeds, and pays you an annuity. At the end of the trust term, the remaining assets pass to your designated charity. For San Diego investors with highly appreciated properties who want to avoid capital gains while generating income, a CRT can be a powerful alternative to a 1031 exchange. KDA’s team works with estate planning attorneys to structure CRTs.

Can I use the STR loophole to offset my W-2 income from a high-paying job?

The STR loophole is the most popular tax strategy among high-income W-2 earners in 2026 for good reason. By purchasing a qualifying STR in San Diego, materially participating in its management, and running a cost segregation study, you can generate large paper losses that offset your salary dollar-for-dollar. A physician earning $500,000 who generates $200,000 in STR losses saves $74,000+ in federal taxes alone. KDA’s team will model your specific income profile and show you exactly how much you can save.

Ready to Minimize Your San Diego Real Estate Taxes?

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