Cost Segregation · Short-Term Rentals

The short-term rental tax strategy: cost segregation against your W-2 income

A sub-7-day rental you materially participate in isn’t “passive” — so a cost-seg depreciation loss can offset your salary. Here’s the real mechanism, and where it falls apart.

By Foad Nabi, EA · Enrolled Agent · California · June 2026

The short version
  • Short-term rentals with an average stay of 7 days or fewer aren’t “rental activities” — so material participation makes losses non-passive.
  • Non-passive losses offset ordinary income (W-2, business) — no real estate professional status required.
  • Cost segregation + 100% federal bonus depreciation is what makes the first-year loss large enough to matter.
  • Material participation must be real and logged; a full-service property manager usually breaks it.
  • California disallows the bonus depreciation, so the state benefit is smaller and slower — plan to hold, not flip.

There is a specific, legal combination that has made short-term rentals one of the most tax-advantaged investments in the country: a cost segregation study, 100% federal bonus depreciation, and a quirk in the passive activity rules that lets the resulting loss offset your ordinary income — your W-2, your business profit — not just rental income. Used correctly, a high earner can buy a short-term rental and generate a six-figure first-year deduction against their day-job income. Used carelessly, it collapses under audit. Here is how it actually works.

The passive activity problem it solves

Normally, rental real estate is “passive” under Section 469. Passive losses — including big depreciation losses — can only offset passive income. So a $150,000 cost-seg loss on a long-term rental usually can’t touch your salary; it just carries forward. That’s the wall most real estate tax strategies run into.

The short-term rental exception goes around the wall. If the average guest stay is seven days or fewer, the activity is, by definition in the regulations, not a rental activity for passive-loss purposes. It’s treated like an active business. That means if you materially participate in it, the loss is non-passive — and a non-passive loss can offset ordinary income, with no need to be a real estate professional.

The two tests, together

(1) Average stay of 7 days or fewer — check your booking data, not your intentions. (2) Material participation — typically 100+ hours and more than anyone else, or 500+ hours. Meet both, and the depreciation loss becomes usable against W-2 and business income.

Where cost segregation comes in

On its own, a short-term rental throws off a modest depreciation deduction. Cost segregation is what makes the loss large enough to matter. Reclassify 20–35% of the building into 5-, 7-, and 15-year property, apply 100% federal bonus depreciation, and a $700,000 property can produce a first-year deduction well into the hundreds of thousands. Combined with material participation in a sub-7-day rental, that loss lands against your ordinary income in year one.

Material participation is where people get sloppy

This is the part audits target. Material participation isn’t a vibe — it’s hours, and you need a contemporaneous log. Cleaning, guest communication, listing management, restocking, maintenance, and being on-call all count; hiring a full-service property manager who does everything generally destroys your participation, because then someone else is doing more than you. Self-managing, or co-managing with documented hours, is usually how this is won. Keep the log as you go, not the night before the exam.

The California layer

Two California-specific points. First, as always, California disallows the bonus depreciation that powers the federal loss — so your California deduction is smaller and spread over years, even though your federal loss is front-loaded. The federal-against-W-2 strategy still works; just don’t expect California to mirror it. Second, California’s own high rates (up to 13.3%) mean the eventual recapture and gain on sale are taxed steeply here, so the strategy is strongest when you plan to hold, not flip.

When this is powerful — and when it’s a trap

It’s powerful for high-income earners who genuinely buy and self-manage a short-term rental and intend to keep it. It’s a trap when the property never actually rents short-term, when a manager does all the work, when the hours aren’t logged, or when someone buys a property they don’t want purely to chase a deduction. The deduction is also borrowed from the future — it reduces basis, so more gain (and recapture) hits on sale. Done right, with intent and records, it’s one of the cleanest large deductions in the code. Done as a stunt, it’s an audit waiting to happen.

Considering a study?

I run cost segregation studies for California property owners.

I work with a licensed engineer on the study itself and handle the tax side — the Form 3115 catch-up, the federal-vs-California split, and whether the deductions are even usable in your situation. Start with the free estimator, or tell me about your property.

Foad Nabi, EA
Enrolled Agent · Founder, Help With Tax

Foad is a federally licensed Enrolled Agent who writes about tax and bookkeeping for small businesses.