How Investors Legally Avoid Taxes with Cost Segregation | Jeff Hiatt
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Speaker 9 jp morgan payments helps you drive efficiency with automated payments and intelligent algorithms across 200 countries and territories that's automation driven finance that's jp morgan payments jp morgan internal data 2024 copyright 2025 jp morgan chase and company all rights reserved jp morgan chase bank and a member fdic deposits held in non-u S branches are not FDIC insured non-deposit products are not FDIC insured this is not a legal commitment for credit or services availability varies eligibility determined by JP Morgan Chase visit jpmorgan.com slash payments disclosure for details.
Speaker 16 10 years from today, Lisa Schneider will trade in her office job to become the leader of a pack of dogs.
Speaker 19 As the owner of her own dog rescue, that is.
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Speaker 25 That's why the younger you are, the more you need AARP.
Speaker 26 Learn more at AARP.org slash skills.
Speaker 27
That's a big concern for people is I don't want to amend the returns and all of that. Well, you can technically go back to 86 when the tax law changed.
No kidding.
Speaker 27 With the 3115. Now, typically, you won't go back that far.
Speaker 27 The real window of opportunity for people where it makes financial sense because the accountants will often say, Justin, what are you going to do this for? It's just a timing difference. Yeah.
Speaker 27
That's what they say. They go, oh, it's just a timing difference.
Well, it is a timing difference.
Speaker 27 But if I give you the opportunity, Justin, Justin, to take a deduction today versus 27 and a half or 39 years, would you rather have it today or would you rather wait?
Speaker 28 What is up, the science of flipping? This might be my favorite episode year to date because it's all about paying no taxes ever again.
Speaker 28 This episode is one that you are going to want to stick with because I have a dear friend of mine who has done 25,000 cost seg studies in the last 25 years and have saved people over $4 billion.
Speaker 27
Jeff Hyatt, what is up, brother? Hey, thank you very much for having me here, Justin. I'm thrilled to be here.
I've seen some of your prior episodes, and they're amazing, and the folks you bring in.
Speaker 27 So thank you for allowing me to darken your doorway here. So
Speaker 28
I appreciate it. You are my very own cost segregation specialist.
So if you need anybody to do your cost segregation studies, I'm telling you, this man does it for me.
Speaker 28 He's done it for 25,000 other people. He has helped save $4 billion of income taxes, or maybe I'm saying that a little wrong, but $4 billion of taxable income.
Speaker 28 Guys, this is your man. So, first of all, go follow him at
Speaker 28 Depreciation Doctor on Instagram,
Speaker 28
Facebook. I think he says Jeff Depreciation Doctor.
You got it. Costsegs.com is the website.
Costsegsplural.com. This is my guy, so he's good enough for you guys.
So that out of the way,
Speaker 28 let's talk about what the hell is a cost seg and why is it so important.
Speaker 27 So cost segregation studies are the way the IRS allows you to accelerate depreciation.
Speaker 27 So a cost seg per se doesn't give you more depreciation, but it allows you to take the depreciation you would get over 27 and a half or 39 years. It allows you to take some of it earlier.
Speaker 27 And by taking it earlier, what that does for the buyer of the property, the owner of the property, is allow them to reduce their current income tax.
Speaker 27 So instead of sending money to Washington, D.C., they get to redeploy that money in their own world and buy their next property more quickly.
Speaker 27 Or they can, you know, buy, you know, they can improve the building so that thereby they can charge maybe a higher rent without having to go to the bank for more mortgage money.
Speaker 28 Yeah, the simplicity is you don't have to cut a check to the IRS. You can actually keep the money and either improve your property or buy another property, et cetera.
Speaker 28
I mean, that's the simplicity of it. This is why it's.
But really, now the key that I want to make a major distinction, because I come from the single-family space,
Speaker 28 where's the argument where it's worth it to do a cost-segregation study on a single-family home more often than not now that I'm also in the apartment space and more in the commercial side and all these other things?
Speaker 28 That is the obvious and we'll get there.
Speaker 28 But for all my single-family lovers that have rentals or maybe in fix and flips or whatever, where's the fine line for you that you advise, like it's worth it to do a cost-seg study or it's not?
Speaker 27 Way back in the day when we first started, we might have said
Speaker 27 you need to be at about a million dollars. Now that was 25 years ago because we didn't have the same database, we didn't have the same technology, we didn't have the same team that we have now.
Speaker 27 Because we have about 10 accountant types and about 27 engineer types, we can now push that number down to somewhere around 300 grand of depreciable basis.
Speaker 27 And that could be in one property or it could be across multiple properties.
Speaker 27 So ultimately what happens is it may not make sense financially for a $100,000 property, but if we can aggregate a bunch of them together, that can start to make sense if we can get to a certain threshold.
Speaker 27 But it can be a really low number ultimately.
Speaker 28
Yeah, so for example, I'm doing a bulk loan. I'm taking five of my rentals and I'm wrapping it into one loan.
So I could go take those five and do a cost study against those five.
Speaker 28
I'm making up the number. Let's just say they're all five combined are worth 800 grand.
I'm making up the number.
Speaker 27 Then it would make sense.
Speaker 28 Where independently they're worth 150 grand and
Speaker 27
that could be a challenge. Because it just won't it won't look exciting to you.
You'll look at it and go,
Speaker 27
whatever. Yeah.
But if you're talking about an $800,000 basis, then we can start to make it look good. Okay.
Speaker 28 So, well, then I'm going to call you after this episode again. We'll put that into my next round of things to do.
Speaker 27 Perfect. And on that note,
Speaker 27 when I said make it look good, typically what we find is that the metric that most clients look at is hey if I spend a dollar how many dollars am I going to get back in tax deferral that's right so you spend a buck you say four or five bucks most people will say hey that's a good deal let's do it that's right we hit that threshold kind of at a minimum around 300 grand
Speaker 27 especially bonus depreciation helps turbocharge that number right so that can be really good so this is where me and my accountant go head to head a lot of times right What is depreciable?
Speaker 28 What isn't? What's going to count? What's not going to count?
Speaker 28 So let's talk a lot about the grainy alerts. There's not a lot of people that are nearly as familiar as obviously you or even myself, right? You are infinitely more experienced, but I know enough.
Speaker 28 What is depreciable? And how does that look? Let's just use a single family home. Let's stick with that for the time being.
Speaker 28
If I buy a home, I renovate the home and then I rent it, the classic Burr model. Sure.
What's depreciable? What is the bonus depreciation? Is it qualify for it? Let's kind of walk through all that.
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Speaker 27
Great. No problem.
So
Speaker 27 I'll say the tax code says to you, hey, Justin, your building to be a building has to have certain things.
Speaker 27 And it doesn't matter if it's a single-family residential home, like rental home, or if it's a 30-story building, a building's going to have certain components, okay?
Speaker 27 Without getting into all the detail and all the specific designations, but when you boil it down, it's walls, windows, doors, roof, HVAC, plumbing for a bathroom, and the electrical for lighting.
Speaker 27
Those are the building components, those pieces. So those are either going to be 27 and a half year for residential rental or 39 years if it's commercial or short-term rental.
Okay.
Speaker 27 So that's kind of the baseline. So what we need to do and what a COSEC study does is identify the pieces that are not in those categories.
Speaker 27 And in your mind, and probably our listeners' minds, they're going, oh my gosh, he just said everything in the building, what's left? Right.
Speaker 27 But you typically get into things like the wiring and the floor coverings, whether it's carpet or
Speaker 27 a particular type of vinyl flooring or laminate, that kind of thing. You get oftentimes into the kitchen space or the plumbing for the kitchen, you know, like for the dispose all and the pipes.
Speaker 27 And you're going to have an ice water line to the refrigerator and the electrical for the refrigerator and the electrical for the dishwasher and the microwaves and the cabinetry is oftentimes considered in that accelerated category.
Speaker 27 So when you stack all that up, you could be somewhere between 15 and 25%
Speaker 27 legitimately
Speaker 27 in a faster life.
Speaker 28 Now, when you say 15 or 20%, you're saying 15 or 20% of the value of the home.
Speaker 27 Of the purchase price of the home.
Speaker 28 Of the purchase price of the home.
Speaker 27
Excuse me. Less land.
So purchase price, less land.
Speaker 27 Because unfortunately,
Speaker 27 the tax code doesn't let us work off of what it's valued at. And us real estate guys, because I am also in the real estate side of the house too.
Speaker 27
Us real estate guys all go, well, it's worth this. Well, unfortunately, that doesn't help us with the tax code.
So the tax code says, what is your basis in the building? Less land.
Speaker 27 So what did you pay for the building? Less land is the correct way to figure this out.
Speaker 28 And then if you do renovate it and turn it into a burr, buy a remodel, rent and refinance.
Speaker 27
And repeat. And repeat.
I've got to get done last year.
Speaker 28 Money you spent on the additions and forced appreciation
Speaker 28 doesn't really factor into this. You are just saying if you bought the home for $100,000 minus the value of the land, $25,000, you have $75,000 that...
Speaker 28 is workable regardless if you spent another 50 on the remodel.
Speaker 27 That's a little bit irrelevant.
Speaker 27 Depending on what you spent it on.
Speaker 28 That's right. So let's say I did the new kitchens, new wiring for the kitchens.
Speaker 27
All that good stuff. So that stuff would likely fall into a five-year life.
Okay, a five-year life. Five-year life.
Speaker 27 Residential rental. Yep.
Speaker 28 Because that speeds it up from 27 and a half. So I'm going to try to simplify this because I'm getting it.
Speaker 28
It's almost like talking to an accountant, right? Because it's so detailed. It is.
But your traditional home gets 27 and a half years of depreciating value, okay, minus the land. Correct.
Speaker 28 But that's not very fast for me. I want this stuff faster.
Speaker 28 So what you're saying is if I go remodel the kitchen on the said property, then I can go take that same level of depreciation, whatever that value is. Let's call it 250.
Speaker 28 There's land value of 50, and we're going to put in 50.
Speaker 27
Okay. So bottom line is, in that case, we're talking about a $200,000 depreciable basis.
Let's say we're calling it 20% that we can reallocate into a faster life.
Speaker 27 So that's going to be, call it $40,000. So 40 grand is going to go into that five-year and 15-year life.
Speaker 27 Now, if some of that, a good chunk of that is going to go, let's say, towards the kitchen space, and that's going to give you bonus depreciation.
Speaker 27 If it's a 24 purchase, it's 60% of the five-year and the 15-year that you get to take immediately. That's right.
Speaker 27 If you had bought it in 23, it would be 80% bonus. If you had bought it from 17 to the end of 22, it would be 100% bonus.
Speaker 27 So bonus depreciation, depending on the year, is either a supercharger for the car guys out there or a turbocharger. So I would say if you're buying it in 24, it's a turbocharger.
Speaker 27 It makes it better, but not as good as a supercharger. So
Speaker 27 properties bought back in 17 to 22, 100% bonus.
Speaker 27 23 was 80%.
Speaker 27 And so at this point, it's 60% in 24. Next year, it'll be 40% bonus, meaning anything pulled out of that slow 27 and a half year life, you get to take either 100%, 80%, 60% in the current year.
Speaker 27 And
Speaker 27 it doesn't matter when you do the cost seg,
Speaker 27 the year you bought the property is the driver. So even though you may have three properties you bought in 22 at 100% bonus eligibility, but you didn't do the cost seg then, doesn't matter.
Speaker 27 You're still going to be able to do them now.
Speaker 27 You can go retroactive and file a 3115 along with your tax return, which means you get to step back in time, grab the 100% bonus depreciation you could have taken, but haven't yet taken.
Speaker 27 You get to grab it in this tax year.
Speaker 28 Do you have to amend that tax? No, you don't have to.
Speaker 27
That's the whole key. That's the good news.
3115 is, I'll say,
Speaker 27 a really nice tool that can be used instead of amending because typically nobody, especially accountants, want to amend. That's right.
Speaker 27 And you can only go back by amending to open years, which is typically three years.
Speaker 27 So if you bought the property back in 2015, you'd be out of luck if you had to amend, but you don't have to amend.
Speaker 27 You use a 3115, which is a complicated form, which is why our firm always does the 3115s for our clients so that there are no errors made on it.
Speaker 27
Because if that eight-page form has errors on it, it typically will trigger an audit. So nobody wants that.
So our firm always completes the 3115.
Speaker 28 I probably have another 14, 15, 16 homes that I bought in 2020
Speaker 28 that
Speaker 28
I got to call you on that too. This is my guy.
You guys got to make sure you get the depreciation doctor on Instagram and costsegs.com. But
Speaker 28 so I think for people who aren't used to hearing this talk, and I am, because me and my accountant go round and round, I talk to you plenty and whatever, I want to try to boil this down with simplicity's simplicity's sake, but in the example we just gave,
Speaker 28 what does that mean? So you said roughly out of the $250,000 home, 50 that going to land, I'm putting 50 grand in, you said roughly there was $40,000 that was
Speaker 27
$250,000 as opposed to your new spend on the 50. That's right.
Okay.
Speaker 28 But when you say $40,000 is going to fit into that five-year bonus depreciation model,
Speaker 28 what does that mean to the consumer? What does that mean to me? So if I bought this deal and you said, Justin, I'm going to get you $40,000 of this value and give it to you in bonus depreciation.
Speaker 28 What kind of savings am I getting there? What does that actually tangibly mean?
Speaker 27 So what that's going to translate to, the $40,000, let's say,
Speaker 27 of accelerated depreciation times your tax rate, whatever that is. So let's assume somebody's in a not maybe the highest tax bracket, but let's say.
Speaker 28 In Florida, I'm in the 36% tax bracket.
Speaker 27
36%, and Florida doesn't have income tax. That's correct.
So then it would be, you would take the 40K times 36, which would be maybe $12,000 to $14,000-ish.
Speaker 28 And I'd be able to write it off on my income.
Speaker 27
Well, no, the $40K would be a deduction against NOI. Okay.
Okay. So that, so whatever you've got as taxable income or NOI, you would sub out the 40.
Yep.
Speaker 27 And whatever your tax rate is, that's what it would yield for you. In my head, I'm doing it, which may not be
Speaker 28 about.
Speaker 27
Give or take $12,014,000 is $100. That's real money.
Yeah.
Speaker 27 But then you mentioned, oh, hey, wait a minute. What about the $50,000 you spent on the new spend? So that's going to fall into the bonus eligibility as well, depending on what you're spending it on.
Speaker 27 Now, if you're spending it on, let's say, a new deck and landscaping and all kinds of other stuff, maybe the landscaping is going to be an expense, but depending on what you're putting in, it might need to be capitalized.
Speaker 27 So if it's outside of your physical building, so it's from your physical building to the property line, and it needs, it's not,
Speaker 27
let's say, I know in Miami, you won't have snowplowing, but those things are just expenses. So I'm not talking about that stuff.
So if you put in an irrigation system or,
Speaker 27 you know, planting beds and stuff, typically
Speaker 27 that would be a capitalized item, but you're going to put it in at 15 years.
Speaker 27 So whatever you spent to improve the look of the property or fences or so that goes to a 15-year versus 27 and a half correct okay and it's bonus eligible so you're getting to grab 60 of that if it's 24 or whenever it was back in the day what about a pool a pool would typically go into 15 years yeah which is still better in 27 and a half maybe you're not as excited about five year but it's better than 27 and a half you got it i mean and keep in mind from 96 when our firm started i joined the firm in 99 but from 96 to 2017
Speaker 27
bonus depreciation never applied to an existing building. Bonus came along in 01, right after 9-11, as an incentive to get the economy going again.
But it only applied to new construction.
Speaker 27
So it never applied to an existing building. So if you bought an existing building, you would not get bonus from 96 to 2017.
But then in 2017, they ended up looking to say, hey, wait a minute.
Speaker 27 Justin, you're buying buildings. Why would you want to wait five or seven or 15 years? Why don't you grab it now?
Speaker 27 And so they expanded bonus depreciation under the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act to make it eligible, buying existing buildings. The 5-7-15-year stuff got included in bonus.
Speaker 28 The
Speaker 28 one caveat we haven't talked about, if you're a doctor
Speaker 28 and you do real estate part-time, very part-time, does that change how you're able to take bonus depreciation?
Speaker 27 Depending on how you're doing it and what you're doing, what properties you're buying.
Speaker 27 Okay.
Speaker 27 So
Speaker 27 let's say you've got a doctor, whether it's a dentist, an MD, a chiropractor, whomever it might be. I'm going to give kind of two scenarios here and I may pivot to three as I'm walking through this.
Speaker 27 But
Speaker 27 if your doctor person is buying investment property like the single families and they're renting them out, then that's called a passive income stream.
Speaker 27
Okay, that doctor is not an active real estate professional. So that means that doctor is getting the income from the property as what they call passive income.
Cost SEG creates a passive loss.
Speaker 27 So the passive loss for that person, that doctor, will only work
Speaker 27
to offset passive income. That's right.
Okay. So it won't flow over to his W-2 or 1099.
Speaker 27 Okay, so, but that was him buying, let's say, a single-family long-term rental, an apartment, a residential rental,
Speaker 27 as opposed to him buying a short-term rental.
Speaker 27 Okay, so if if and if that doctor is somehow, some way actively involved in the management, in the maintenance, in the upkeep, let's say, of that property, the short-term rental, that short-term rental now is not treated like a 27 and a half year, I'll call it apartment, but it's treated like a hotel.
Speaker 27 So it's going to have a 39-year life,
Speaker 27 but that doctor is going to get two additional benefits out of it. Anything that they spend on improvements is going to have
Speaker 27 another category called qualified improvement property. Quip
Speaker 27 is what it's.
Speaker 3 JP Morgan Payments helps you drive efficiency with automated payments and intelligent algorithms across 200 countries and territories.
Speaker 6 That's automation-driven finance.
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Speaker 8 JP Morgan Internal Data 2024. Copyright 2025.
Speaker 9 J.P. Morgan Chase Company.
Speaker 2 All rights reserved.
Speaker 9 J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, NA member, FDIC.
Speaker 10 Deposits held in non-U.S. branches are not FDIC insured.
Speaker 11 Non-deposit products are not FDIC insured.
Speaker 13 This is not a legal commitment for credit or services. Availability varies.
Speaker 2 Eligibility determined by J.P.
Speaker 14 Morgan Chase.
Speaker 15 Visit jpmorgan.com slash payments disclosure for details.
Speaker 16 10 years from today, Lisa Schneider will trade in her office job to become the leader of a pack of dogs.
Speaker 19 As the owner of her own dog rescue, that is.
Speaker 21 A second act made possible by the reskilling courses Lisa's taking now with AARP to help make sure her income lives as long as she does.
Speaker 20 And she can finally run with the big dogs and the small dogs who just think they're big dogs.
Speaker 25 That's why the younger you are, the more you need AARP.
Speaker 26 Learn more at aarp.org slash skills.
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Speaker 27 Referred to as, so for that 15-year property, so they're going to spend stuff, spend money on items within the property.
Speaker 27 That's short-term rental, and they get to claim 15-year qualified improvement property, which means they get bonus on that. Whereas residential folks spending new money don't get to claim QIP.
Speaker 28 So even if there was a long-term rental that was a high price point.
Speaker 28
Yep. Okay.
Yep. It's called a million dollars.
Okay, agreed. And he's a doctor.
Yeah.
Speaker 27
He's going to do a long-term rental for it. Yep.
Right.
Speaker 28 And the cost SAG study happens. Yep.
Speaker 28 Does he get any ability to put it put the
Speaker 28 tax write-off towards his doctor income at all based around the performance of that cost seg study being able to outweigh the income monthly?
Speaker 28 Is there any way that he can, because the price of the home changes how much the cost SEG study
Speaker 28 does that make sense?
Speaker 28 Yeah.
Speaker 27 So
Speaker 27
from the scenario you just gave me, my understanding is that that doctor is still going to have passive income. That's right.
This is still a passive loss.
Speaker 27 So that in and of itself, the way you framed it,
Speaker 27 he's going to be getting higher rents from that property for a mill versus $200,000. So
Speaker 27 any loss that he can't use, the passive loss we create for him,
Speaker 27
and he can't use it this year. So let's say his NOI is 100 grand, let's say.
So Cost Seg comes in and we give him a deduction of call it 200 grand, let's say.
Speaker 27 So now he's got 100 grand of income the first year from the property, and the cost seg gives him a $200,000 write-off against the NOI.
Speaker 27 So now he's only going to be taxed on $100,000. He wouldn't be taxed the first year on any.
Speaker 27 You've wiped it out, correct? He's got $100,000, what they call loss carry-forward. So he's got that in his back pocket for the next year.
Speaker 27 So now it wiped out two years of taxable income from that property, which is pretty good.
Speaker 27 I'll change. Remember, I said,
Speaker 27 so I got
Speaker 27
residential property. We got short-term rental there.
And the third possibility for him might be for that doctor if he is buying
Speaker 27 a property that he can house his practice in. Okay, so as opposed to renting from Joe Blow down the street, he's now going to buy his own practice building.
Speaker 27 Now, there's a part of the tax code that is called a single economic unit grouping election.
Speaker 27 For the tax code,
Speaker 27 that's too short for a name.
Speaker 27 It's insane, But single economic unit grouping election. So what that means is that doctor can say, hey, wait a minute.
Speaker 27 Yes, I run my practice, but I also own this building, and they should be considered together. And so now the doctor can use the grouping election so that it will be treated as active income.
Speaker 27
So now he owns the building. He's got his own rental income.
He might have other tenants in there. So for the other tenants, maybe we've got to carve that off and set that aside as passive income.
Speaker 27 But for his own practice, that grouping election will allow him to use the increased losses against his taxable income as W-2 or 1099.
Speaker 27 So that's a good tool. And it may not be in the science of flipping group, but you might have one of your followers who is a doctor who would be interested in that part of the conversation.
Speaker 28 Well, and that's why
Speaker 28 I'm trying to make this as because it's very complex and there's like you just said you're you're citing you know the laws of all this but i want to make it as simple as possible because what everyone needs to understand is if you're buying real estate in any way to keep
Speaker 28 this is the best thing that you could possibly do regardless of whether it's 27 and a half years to your one pivot because i've gone down this rabbit hole buying a cheap home and you start to just say is the cost of doing the cost seg
Speaker 28 dollar for dollar create the value that actually makes sense for me. And if you're buying a cheap home and it's 80 grand, it probably just doesn't.
Speaker 28 And just take your 27 and a half years and take it for what it is and let's go.
Speaker 28 Now, what I think you really have highlighted well, which is, and I didn't know this, so we're going to talk after, but like, I could go take 15 of those lower price point homes, group them together.
Speaker 28 I think I said I have 15, let's say the average price is, you know, 150 grand, so $3 million worth of assets.
Speaker 28
Now I can give them to you, say, hey, let's do one big cost seg on this entire thing. And they're all burrs.
I bought them all. I remodeled them all.
So it would be your traditional stuff.
Speaker 28 And so that's huge. So I want the listeners to understand as detailed as Jeff can get,
Speaker 28
really, no matter how you're doing this, I would encourage anyone out there, you need to be buying assets. I love wholesaling.
I love fix and flipping, but you need to be buying assets.
Speaker 28 And then what I would say is if you can get into the multi-unit space, even better, right?
Speaker 27 Cool.
Speaker 28
I mean, that's where you really want to play. And I'm going to even use my own examples.
and you know, because I've told you, we bought four apartments. We have a fourplex.
Speaker 28 We have like a bunch of different stuff.
Speaker 28 What is the benefit to my 16-door apartment versus
Speaker 28 single-family homes, packaging my 15 single-family homes? Is there a benefit for one roof, 16-doors versus 16 single-family homes?
Speaker 27 What you're going to find is that on
Speaker 27 so it goes back to that ROI conversation. Somebody might look at one of our proposals and go, wow, three to one, I'm thrilled, let's go.
Speaker 27
But most people want it to be four or five to one when they're starting to look at it. Like I spend a dollar, say four or five, then I'm good to go.
Right.
Speaker 27 Where you're talking about a bigger property, theoretically with a bigger purchase price, you know, 16 doors versus one door. Right.
Speaker 27
You know, you might be looking at an eight or a 10 or a 20 to one. That's right.
Some of my clients have 150 to one.
Speaker 27
Some of them are 800 to one. But those are bigger, obviously.
Much bigger. Much bigger billings.
Speaker 27 So I'm not trying to go there, but
Speaker 27 it just depends on what is the depreciable basis and how can we make that work for you guys. And we'll do everything we can to help your clients.
Speaker 28
You know, it's funny is so Grant and I, Grant Cardone and I have gotten pretty close. And, you know, I've always kind of loved the single family space.
And he keeps just poking me by poking.
Speaker 28
He calls me out a lot about it. But, I mean, it really makes more sense.
The bigger you get in this space of real estate, the more you should really be in the commercial side of it, right?
Speaker 28 Is there is some level of like brain damage that you don't need to be going through having 15 single family homes, 15 separate tenants with 15 roofs, 15 electricals, 15 HVACs,
Speaker 28 or you have one roof, you have 15 doors, you have, you know, three ACs versus 15 ACs, et cetera, right? There's an argument to be made.
Speaker 28 And the biggest one tends to be right now for me as an income maker, right? Like I do very well, I need your services.
Speaker 28 And it makes a lot more sense to go buy a $3 million apartment than to one by one buy single-family homes one after another.
Speaker 27 Well, as you call it, possibly brain damage, you know, 15 transactions, 15 leases that might be late payments. I mean, it could.
Speaker 27 But when you've got one situation going, that can be better.
Speaker 27 You mentioned one roof.
Speaker 27 And what I'll go back to is one of the things that differentiate our firm from many of the other folks out there in the CostAg space is that we always identify all of the assets in the building, not just the accelerated items.
Speaker 27 Meaning, many folks out there in the space that I'm in
Speaker 27
would only give you the five-year and the 15-year detail. And you would go, yeah, that's cool.
That's what I want. Well, what we're doing is giving details on the 27 and a half year stuff as well.
Speaker 27
Sure. So that when that roof fails, maybe you guys have a big storm down here and the roof is just trash finally.
You spent years patching it.
Speaker 27 Can't do that anymore. It's going in a dumpster.
Speaker 27 Well, now all of a sudden, you're able to, when you put the new roof on, since you have the detail of the original roof, you're able to take a write-off or an abandonment loss on that original roof when it hits the dumpster.
Speaker 27 So that can help you take another bite at the tax apple. with a report that's properly completed.
Speaker 28
So if you had to give advice, I have a good friend. He's a lawyer, high-income earner, and he's playing around in the single-family space.
He keeps buying these single-family homes.
Speaker 28
And I love that because I want him to be more in real estate. And so, I'm not opposed to him.
What advice would he give him? High-income earner.
Speaker 28 I mean, he does very well financially, and he keeps buying these single-family homes, which I encourage him to do because I would rather him be in real estate than not.
Speaker 27 Sure.
Speaker 28 But what advice would you give him from your side of the world? Would you say get into apartments, you know, at least start getting five doors or more, start getting at higher price points?
Speaker 28 Like, what would be your perspective for that person?
Speaker 27 um if if um to take most advantage of what you offer right to say hey i know the laws here's how you win by following the rules of the laws so okay so if if at all possible for your um friend the attorney person um
Speaker 27 if that person's let's say significant other or spouse uh were to get in the real estate business themselves and manage all of the leases and manage the properties and and do
Speaker 27
everything that was needed to become what they call a real estate professional. That's right.
Then the whole conversation about passive loss, passive income goes away. That's right.
And that changes.
Speaker 27 That changes.
Speaker 27 And then that attorney who's bought 10 or 15 properties and maybe they're potentially outsourcing property management or something else, but now if that attorney is spending his time or spouse's time doing the management and they're legitimately called a real estate professional, that would be a big deal.
Speaker 27 Yeah. And that could legitimately be called a game changer for that person.
Speaker 28
Yeah, I think that's probably the smartest thing. I mean, that's why you suggested it.
But
Speaker 28 now,
Speaker 28 then it does, again, it doesn't really manage.
Speaker 28 It doesn't really matter what he buys because at that point, they're a full-blown real estate professional. They get the same stuff that I get.
Speaker 28 They get the rapid depreciation for active income, et cetera. You got it.
Speaker 27 I mean, that could work. And typically, the attorney could also have that grouping election.
Speaker 28
This is actually an actual question that I don't know the answer. So I'm going to ask it.
Could the attorney ever be a real estate professional?
Speaker 27 So
Speaker 28 if he's buying enough of these, at what point do you say, well, I bought 30 homes.
Speaker 28 I'm a professional.
Speaker 27 There's a 750-hour a year requirement for spending time in the space, and it really does have to be your primary business.
Speaker 27 So if that attorney, friend of yours, is
Speaker 27 making
Speaker 27 200 grand a year in being an attorney, but he's making 300 or 400 grand a year in real estate account. That's making argument.
Speaker 27 And again, this would have to be passed through his accountant CPA to make sure that all the other little nuances are met, but then that could be justified, seemingly, with the limited information you've given me there.
Speaker 27 And they could spend their time doing that then. But if he's making $4 million a year as the attorney person
Speaker 27 and he's making $200 or $300,000, that's going to be a bigger stretch to get over that real estate professional designation. Because $4 million a year of income as an attorney,
Speaker 27 and it's going to be hard for him to tell
Speaker 27 the IRS, oh, I'm a real estate professional making $200,000 a year in real estate and $4 million a year in my
Speaker 27 Do you
Speaker 28 so I guess like what about loan brokers
Speaker 27 realtors realtors are probably the obvious yes they can be if they're somehow some way managing real estate so I my understanding is um that a plain old real estate broker that doesn't have any ownership you know and and doesn't manage their properties and things like that may not per se qualify
Speaker 27 I wonder what they would because wouldn't that be a real estate professional well they typically it will typically be listed as real estate agent i think but again it depends on the uh accountant and if they and whether they're willing to play the game well it's not the game it's within the code i mean if they're so if they're buying property so if it's a real estate agent so if it's just a real estate agent that's just doing um real estate transactions that's different than a real estate agent who's also an investor who's also managing property,
Speaker 27 which might be, you know, you've got five or seven or ten properties and that real estate person is managing those and maintaining the leases and negotiating with the grass, you know, the landscaping company and the various other services that need to go along.
Speaker 27 If that person is amassing the 750 hours,
Speaker 27 then that would probably be okay. Yeah.
Speaker 27 But again, I deal with CPAs and the tax.
Speaker 16 10 years from today, Lisa Schneider will train in her office job to become the leader of a pack of dogs.
Speaker 19 As the owner of her own dog rescue, rescue, that is.
Speaker 23 A second act made possible by the reskilling courses Lisa's taking now with AARP to help make sure her income lives as long as she does and she can finally run with the big dogs and the small dogs who just think they're big dogs.
Speaker 25 That's why the younger you are, the more you need AARP.
Speaker 26 Learn more at AARP.org slash skills.
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Speaker 27 For sure, and the CPAs
Speaker 27 we teach all the time.
Speaker 28 And they're do you guys, when you say that, do you teach, like, is there somewhere your website, obviously, but in your Instagram, can someone be taught more of this?
Speaker 28 Do you guys have some level of education on this?
Speaker 27
We teach many, many of the nation's accounting societies. We teach for them.
So we do continuing ed credit for CPAs.
Speaker 27 Depending on the state as well, we can do continuing ed credit for real estate folks as a CPE for their real estate license, depending on the state.
Speaker 27 So we do that all the time. And depending on how long you want to go, so for some of the state societies for CPAs, we'll do an eight-hour course, which is painful
Speaker 27 if you're not a CPA. But if you're a CPA and you really want to drill down on this, we've got eight hours of content.
Speaker 27 But then typically we're doing one or two hours. And we do them via Zoom or we do them live.
Speaker 28
I would even just tell everyone here as you have questions. I'm sure you guys are thinking, like reach out to him on Instagram.
Ask him. He's very easygoing, right?
Speaker 28 He's the one that does all my cost seg stuff. And so, again,
Speaker 28 I think that's probably the path of ease for them to reach out to you would be Instagram,
Speaker 28 depreciation doctor.com or at depreciation doctor on Instagram. But I think as you guys are sitting here, like, well, what about this? What about this?
Speaker 28
Maybe I'm not asking the right questions for you. That's okay.
Go to depreciation doctor on Instagram and just start asking Jeff questions. And the question I'll kind of lead with now will be is,
Speaker 28 if you are a W-2 employee, there's essentially how I heard it, there's no world
Speaker 28 that you can get the bonus depreciation in the same way I do as a real estate professional.
Speaker 27
Short-term rentals. So what you just said wasn't exactly correct.
Okay.
Speaker 27 So to clarify, if they're doing short-term rental.
Speaker 28 It's 15-year as a short-term rental.
Speaker 27
15 and 5. So you get the same thing.
It's just where is it going to apply? So what you're getting is the ability as a short-term rental manager. Yeah.
You're getting to claim that more against your
Speaker 27 W-2
Speaker 27 because you're actively involved.
Speaker 28 Actively involved. Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Speaker 27 So kind of like that grouping election, kind of, this isn't exactly correct, but it's kind of like the grouping election for the dentist or the attorney that runs their own practice out of the building they rent or that they own, I should say.
Speaker 27 But when you're doing short-term rental, that could work for them.
Speaker 27 But a W-2 employee, that would be the play for the W-2 employees to go doing short-term rental
Speaker 27 in this scenario.
Speaker 28 Yeah, I mean, that's what people want to know is how can I take advantage of these laws that were written for me? And I love real estate, and I'm here listening to Justin every week.
Speaker 28 And so I want them to know that. And again, I may not be asking every question that they have, right?
Speaker 28 And I'm kind of doing my best to think this this through, but would I, again, go to, you know, Depreciation Doctor on Instagram or costsegs.com.
Speaker 28 What haven't I asked that maybe you would say people really should also know this?
Speaker 27 Well,
Speaker 27 many times people want to know, again, kind of going back to going back, what if I missed it? You know, and that's a big concern for people is I don't want to amend the returns and all of that.
Speaker 27 Well, you can technically go back to 86 when the tax law changed. No kidding.
Speaker 27 With the 3115. Now, typically you won't go back that far.
Speaker 27 The real window of opportunity for people where it makes financial sense because the accountants will often say, Justin, what are you going to do this for? It's just a timing difference. Yeah.
Speaker 27
That's what they say. They go, oh, it's just a timing difference.
Well, it is a timing difference.
Speaker 27 But if I give you the opportunity, Justin, to take a deduction today versus 27 and a half or 39 years, would you rather have it today or would you rather wait? All day today.
Speaker 27
Twice on Sundays. Exactly.
Most people say that and and they go, wait a minute, I don't know if I'll be alive in 27 and a half years. Don't know if I'll own the building then.
Speaker 27
Don't know what the tax code, tax rates are going to be. I'll take it today if I can.
And so with that said, it is a timing difference.
Speaker 27 But if you can redeploy that money, and typically my clients or our clients say they can kind of think of something better to do with it than sending it away in a tax payment.
Speaker 27 they can redeploy it and improve their portfolio, make it better and stronger and make their financial world better as things go.
Speaker 27 So that's a kind of a question there is that the accountants often say, well, hey, Justin, you're going to take all your depreciation early, and then what are you going to have?
Speaker 27 Well, we're not taking all of it early. We're taking 15 to 25% early, which means you have 75 to 85 percent on a go-forward basement.
Speaker 27 So you still have most of your depreciation.
Speaker 28 It's just. Ian, the point that you're bringing up is so valuable to people, at least like me, I can go buy another one.
Speaker 27 So
Speaker 27 that's the treadmill.
Speaker 28
I have multiple businesses, but one of my businesses has a bookkeeper/slash accountant, and he always talks about playing for overtime. And that's the treadmill.
You keep kicking for overtime, right?
Speaker 28
Great. Give it to me today, and I'll figure out next year when next year comes.
Let's keep going as I keep kicking this field goal down the road. Yeah.
Speaker 28 And guys, I mean, this is probably my favorite subject because, as someone who makes money, you don't necessarily want to pay it to the IRS.
Speaker 28
I'm all about being a great citizen, but they wrote these rules for us. Let's just play by the rules.
And it just makes sense.
Speaker 28 And I know a lot of the billionaires and names will be restricting, but listen, Donald Trump gets a lot of hate about not paying taxes, but all he's doing is playing by the guidelines the IRS gave him.
Speaker 27 You're absolutely right. And another one that's a tool that's an adjunct to CostSEG,
Speaker 27 and we don't do 1031s, but 1031s are a great tool.
Speaker 27 And that, as you said, kind of kicks the can down the road for the tax on the gain, but the cost seg can apply to the relinquished property, the first leg, as well as the acquired property if the new acquired property has enough basis in it.
Speaker 27 So you can kind of potentially do a cost seg from both ends. There are some nuances that need to be kind of followed there, but it's doable on both sides.
Speaker 27 So there's lots of good tools out there. You just have to know how they all fit together versus just kind of winging it.
Speaker 28 Well, and that's why I say reach out to Jeff, go to Depreciation Doctor at Depreciation Doctor on Instagram, Jeff Depreciation Doctor on Facebook, costsegs.com. I mean, he's a world of knowledge.
Speaker 28
He will answer your questions directly. He does all this for me.
So if he's good enough for me, he's good enough for all of you. I appreciate you being here on Science Flip.
Speaker 27 Oh, I'm so glad to be here. And on the
Speaker 27 Depreciation Doctor on Instagram, every Thursday is Thor's Day. And originally, the
Speaker 27
beginning of Thursday was originally in Roman times Thor's Day. So, my dog, my German Shepherd dog, is Thor.
I know.
Speaker 28 So, yeah, you've met him.
Speaker 27 And so, Thor, every Thursday or Thor's Day,
Speaker 27 has some sort of fun little video on my Instagram channel and Facebook and LinkedIn and all that.
Speaker 27 But Thor will go find depreciation deductions for clients, and it's kind of a fun play on that. So, with that said, just give me one second.
Speaker 27 So
Speaker 27
I'm giving you a depreciation, Dr. Thor.
Yeah. What's up, Thor? Look at this.
Speaker 28 Thor, for those that can see in the camera, give it to all the cameras. Thor, this looks just like your dog book.
Speaker 27 Well, yes, exactly.
Speaker 28 So thank you very much. Oh, yeah.
Speaker 27 I thought you might have a little fun with that. And thanks for your time today and allowing me to join you here.
Speaker 28 Reach out to Jeff. Appreciate you guys.
Speaker 28 If you learned at least one thing and you think there's someone you know that needs to learn a little bit about cost sags depreciation not paying taxes real estate share this episode with two of your friends see you guys in the next episode
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Speaker 16 10 years from today, Lisa Schneider will trade in her office job to become the leader of a pack of dogs.
Speaker 19 As the owner of her own dog rescue, that is.
Speaker 21 A second act made possible by the reskilling courses Lisa's taking now with AARP to help make sure her income lives as long as she does.
Speaker 20 And she can finally run with the big dogs and the small dogs who just think they're big dogs.
Speaker 25 That's why the younger you are, the more you need AARP.
Speaker 26 Learn more at AARP.org slash skills.
Speaker 31
Tis the season of gifting and holes to deck. And the Who's in Houdinville were in love with new tech.
Where can we find Sonos and Samsung and Nintendo? they shouted. Would they find it in one place?
Speaker 31
This they questioned and doubted. When suddenly a who yelled, Walmart's the place to start.
And these who added headphones, TVs, and games to their carts.
Speaker 31
With Walmart, their shopping was done in a flurry. They cried out, who knew? And ordered their gifts in a hurry.
Shop the latest tech gifts in the Walmart app.
Speaker 32 At Capella University, learning online doesn't mean learning alone.
Speaker 32 You'll get support from people who care about your success, like your enrollment specialist, who gets to know you and the goals you'd like to achieve.
Speaker 32 You'll also get a designated academic coach who's with you throughout your entire program. Plus, career coaches are available to help you navigate your professional goals.
Speaker 32 A different future is closer than you think with Capella University. Learn more at Capella.edu.