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Moving Your Rental Property Into An LLC

form an llcBy Jason Watson, CPA
Posted Monday, August 5 2024

There are several benefits of owning your rental property in an LLC as we’ve discussed in a previous chapter. Here is a recap-

  • Separate checking account for compartmentalization.
  • Anonymity.
  • Orderly ownership (wealth) transfer baked into the Operating Agreement side-stepping Wills and Trusts.

Downsides with an LLC owning a rental-

  • Additional tax return and the associated preparation fees in a multi-member LLC environment (unless you are in a community property state).
  • Annual Secretary of State filings. Some states are cheap, some are insanely expensive.
  • Franchise tax or some sort of LLC fee charged annually.

Contrary to what your produce clerks says, you don’t get-

  • Extra tax deductions.
  • Tort liability protection or iron-clad asset protection.

Again, please refer to our expanded section on the benefits of putting a rental into a multi-member limited liability company taxed as a partnership.

Basic Steps

What are the basic steps to get this accomplished? The first step is to contact your lender. Because they have your title on lockdown, you will need to coordinate with them. Since 2010 or so, this is a much-accepted common practice and the hurdles are very few and small.

The second step is to connect with a title company to perfect all the recording magic. An attorney can likely handle this as well, and likely can bundle the LLC formation, Operating Agreement drafting for your specific needs including estate planning and then the ultimate title transfer.

Other Considerations

Keep in mind these other considerations when you move your primary rental property into an LLC-

  • You might trigger transfer taxes with the county or local tax jurisdiction including HOAs.
  • Your historical depreciation and fixed asset listing from your individual tax return (Form 1040) just slides on over. You do not reset your depreciation or get a step-up in basis.
  • You are contributing property to the LLC. It is unlikely this will be viewed as a sale, but be aware that you might accidentally trip this wire (again unlikely, especially if you use qualified professionals such as attorneys, title agents, etc.).
  • Leases, permits, contracts and utilities will need to be updated with the name of the LLC. Banking information for auto-pay will also need updating.
  • If your LLC is owned by you and your spouse, you might suddenly create a partnership tax filing obligation depending on your state (community property versus common law property). This is not all bad. There might be some benefits, and we discuss them in our section on rental property partnerships.
  • WCG CPAs & Advisors usually recommend naming the LLC after the address such as 1234 Main Street LLC.

I Just Got A Rental, What Do I Do? 2024-2025 Edition

Rental BookThis KB article is an excerpt from our 320+ page book (some picture pages, but no scatch and sniff) which was released September 30, 2024, and is available in paperback from Amazon, as an eBook for Kindle and as a PDF from ClickBank. We used to publish with iTunes and Nook, but keeping up with two different formats was brutal. You can cruise through these KB articles online, click on the fancy buttons below or visit our webpage which provides more information.

I Just Got a Rental, What Do I Do?

Get practical rental property tax tips with humor, backed by real cases – click here to learn more!

Kindle - I Just Got a Rental, What Do I Do?

Get practical rental property tax tips with humor, backed by real cases – Now on Kindle!

PDF - I Just Got A Rental, What Do I Do 2024 Edition

Get practical rental property tax tips, backed by real cases – now in an accessible PDF!

Talk to a Real Estate CPA About Your Rental Property

Please use the form below to tell us a little about yourself, and what you have going on with your investments and wealth-building objectives. WCG CPAs & Advisors are real estate CPAs, tax strategists and rental property consultants, and we look forward to talking to you!

The tax advisors and business consultants at WCG are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.

We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.” Yes, it is fun to brag about how complicated your world is at cocktail parties, but let’s not unnecessarily complicate it for the bragging rights.

Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.

We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax prep, and more importantly tax strategy and planning?

Should we need to schedule an additional consultation, our fee is $250 for 40 minutes. Fun! If we decide to press forward with a Business Advisory or Tax Patrol Services engagement, we will credit the consultation fee towards those services.

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