February 21, 2026 - 19:59

A specialized tax designation known as Real Estate Professional Status (REPS) offers a powerful avenue for significant tax savings, a strategy sometimes colloquially referred to by experts as the "marital loophole." This provision within the tax code is not a loophole in the legal sense but a legitimate status that, when met with strict IRS criteria, can dramatically alter an investor's tax liability.
To qualify, an individual must spend more than 750 hours per year in real estate activities, with those hours constituting over half of their total working time. This often involves meticulous time-tracking of activities like property management, construction oversight, and leasing work. For married couples filing jointly, only one spouse needs to meet the hourly requirements, which is where the common nickname originates.
The primary benefit of achieving REPS is the ability to deduct rental real estate losses against other forms of income, such as W-2 wages or business earnings. Without this status, these losses are typically suspended and carried forward. For high-income earners actively engaged in property investment, navigating the REPS rules can unlock substantial annual deductions, turning paper losses into immediate tax relief. It is a complex but valuable tool for serious real estate investors.
May 9, 2026 - 01:48
EXCLUSIVE: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Takes His $49 Million Hawaii Compound Off the Market—Weeks After Attack on San Francisco HomeOpenAI CEO Sam Altman has quietly taken his sprawling Hawaii compound off the market, just weeks after an attack on his San Francisco residence. The luxury property, valued at approximately $49...
May 8, 2026 - 01:38
New York City Pied-a-Terre Tax Gets Closer to Reality. Real Estate Stocks Shrug It Off.A long-discussed proposal to tax luxury second homes in New York City is inching closer to becoming law, stirring frustration among business leaders while leaving real estate investors surprisingly...
May 7, 2026 - 02:37
Mamdani’s tax the rich slogan is ‘just as hateful’ as racial slurs, New York real estate titan saysA New York real estate billionaire has sparked controversy by comparing Mayor Zohran Mamdani`s `tax the rich` campaign slogan to racial slurs, calling it equally hateful. The developer, a titan in...
May 6, 2026 - 08:32
Private Real Estate Compensation Bounces Back Across the BoardThe recovery in private real estate compensation is picking up speed, with median pay rising in nearly every job category in 2025, according to the latest compensation survey from Sousou Partners...