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There is an issue that keep appearing in cases coming out of the Tax Court: Large rental losses taken by taxpayers claiming to be real estate pros.

Real estate professionals must meet two tests to beat the passive-activity loss rules
and deduct their rental losses in full.

  1. They must spend over half their working hours
  2. more than 750 hours a year materially participating in real estate activities.

The IRS often has success in court when challenging real-estate pro status.

Here, a couple deducted a big rental loss. The husband had a real estate license and worked full-time as a firefighter, and the wife held down two jobs as a nurse.

Neither the husband nor the wife separately put in enough hours to qualify as a real estate pro, so the write-off is axed (Whoriskey, TC Summ. Op. 2021-30).

Note that the couple also did not qualify for another exception, which allows $25,000 of rental losses to be deducted by people who actively participate in a rental activity, because their modified adjusted gross income exceeded the $150,000 phaseout limit.

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