Real estate generates more tax questions for small business owners than almost any other asset class. Sale of a personal home, rental property income, commercial real estate owned by the business, like-kind exchanges, depreciation, points paid at closing, inherited property — each has its own rules and several have changed significantly in the last few years. Here is the 2026 framework for real estate tax topics that matter to Texas small business owners and investors.
The tax treatment of a real estate gain depends on three factors: how long you held the property, what type of property it is, and how it was used.
Texas has no state income tax, so Texas real estate sales generate only federal tax. Compare with California where state-level tax can add another 9.3-13.3% on the same gain.
A Section 1031 like-kind exchange lets you defer the federal capital gains tax on the sale of investment or business real estate when you reinvest the proceeds in like-kind real estate. The tax is deferred, not eliminated — the new property takes the old property’s basis.
Strict rules apply:
For real estate investors planning a portfolio over decades, the 1031 exchange is one of the most powerful tax deferral tools available. Chain 1031s together and the deferral can last a lifetime — at death, heirs receive the property at stepped-up basis, effectively eliminating the deferred gain entirely.
Real estate is depreciated over standardized periods set by the IRS:
Depreciation is a deduction that reduces current-year taxable income, but it reduces the property’s tax basis dollar-for-dollar. When you sell, the depreciation taken is “recaptured” — taxed at a maximum 25% federal rate (Section 1250 recapture). This is why depreciation is technically a tax DEFERRAL, not a permanent savings.
Cost segregation studies break a building into components with shorter depreciation lives (5, 7, or 15 years for certain interior fixtures and land improvements). For commercial real estate over $500,000, a cost segregation study often accelerates significant tax deductions into the early years of ownership. The cost of the study is usually $5,000-$15,000 and the resulting tax savings can be 10-20% of the property’s depreciable basis pulled forward.
Bonus depreciation and Section 179 expensing can accelerate depreciation on certain real estate components, but with limitations:
Caution: aggressive depreciation reduces the property’s basis, which can mean a larger taxable gain at sale. For real estate planned to hold long-term, the depreciation acceleration usually still wins on the time value of money. For property planned to flip within 3-5 years, the math can flip the other way.
Rental income is reported on Schedule E (or Form 8825 for partnerships/S-corps). Most expenses are deductible: mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, repairs, maintenance, utilities, property management fees, advertising, legal/accounting fees, and depreciation.
Passive activity rules limit when rental losses can offset other income:
For small business owners with rental property as a side investment, the Real Estate Professional path is rarely available (you’d need to be primarily a real estate professional). For higher-income owners, rental losses commonly carry forward for years.
The IRS treats vacation home rentals using three categories based on personal-use days vs rental days:
For Texas vacation homes — beach properties on the Gulf Coast, lake homes near Austin, mountain cabins in nearby states — the 14-day rule is worth structuring around if you can keep rentals brief. Big-name rentals during specific high-demand windows (Super Bowl city, eclipse path, festival weekends) often pay enough in 14 days to make tax-free rental income exceptionally valuable.
Converting a personal residence to a rental can make sense in three scenarios:
Tax consequences to model BEFORE making the switch:
For most Texas small business owners deciding whether to rent vs sell, the math turns on three factors: expected appreciation rate, current rental income potential, and your tax bracket. Renting tends to win when expected long-term appreciation is meaningful AND rental yields cover carrying costs.
Real estate inherited at death receives a basis step-up to fair market value on the date of death. This wipes out the decedent’s unrealized capital gain entirely. Heirs who sell the property soon after inheritance pay capital gains tax only on appreciation AFTER the date of death.
This is one of the most valuable tax provisions in the code for real estate:
The step-up applies to most assets, not just real estate. But real estate is where the step-up most often eliminates substantial gains, given typical 20-40 year holding periods and Texas property appreciation rates.
For estate planning, this drives a core principle: “do not sell appreciated real estate without a tax reason” for older high-net-worth owners. Holding to death and letting heirs receive at stepped-up basis can save more tax than any complex deferral structure. See our estate planning tax guide for the broader framework.
In a competitive real estate market, sellers sometimes pay “points” (prepaid mortgage interest) to lower the buyer’s effective interest rate. The IRS allows the BUYER to deduct seller-paid points as if the buyer had paid them, with three conditions:
If you itemize deductions, the seller-paid points become an immediate Schedule A deduction in the year of purchase. If you take the standard deduction, you lose the benefit but you also avoid the basis reduction.
For Texas buyers in markets where seller concessions are common (post-2022 cooling), this is a frequently-missed deduction. Review the closing disclosure carefully and discuss with your tax preparer in the year of purchase.
Business real estate (the building where your operation runs, owned by the business or the owner) gets Section 1231 treatment at sale:
For small business owners selling the building they operated out of, the math is usually favorable. For those who took aggressive depreciation, plan for the 25% recapture portion. A Section 1031 exchange can defer the entire gain into a new business property — useful when the business is moving but the owner wants to maintain real estate exposure.
For Fort Worth small business owners considering selling their commercial building, planning the timing relative to retirement, succession, and 1031 options can mean six-figure tax differences. Let’s model the options together before the sale closes.
Until next time.
Personal residence sale: first $250K (single) / $500K (MFJ) of gain is excluded if you owned and used the home as your main home for at least 2 of the prior 5 years. Investment property held over 1 year: long-term capital gains rates (0%, 15%, or 20% federal plus 3.8% NIIT for high earners). Depreciation recapture portion of any sale: up to 25% federal rate. Texas has no state income tax on real estate gains.
A Section 1031 exchange defers federal capital gains tax on the sale of investment or business real estate by reinvesting in like-kind real property. Rules: 45-day identification window, 180-day closing window, Qualified Intermediary required to hold proceeds, replacement property must equal or exceed sale price and debt. Only applies to real estate after 2017 TCJA (personal property removed). Personal residences do NOT qualify. Cashed-out portion (“boot”) is taxable.
Residential rental property: 27.5 years straight-line. Commercial real estate: 39 years straight-line. Land is NOT depreciable. Qualified Improvement Property (QIP) for non-residential interior improvements: 15 years, eligible for bonus depreciation. Cost segregation studies can reclassify portions of a building into shorter-life components (5-15 years) eligible for bonus depreciation, often accelerating 10-20% of basis into early years.
If you rent your home or vacation property for 14 days or fewer per year, all rental income is tax-free and does not need to be reported. Personal use is unlimited. This is the most underused vacation home tax provision. Beyond 14 days of rental, the property must be reported on Schedule E and the personal-use vs rental-day ratio determines whether losses are deductible.
Yes. Real estate inherited at death receives a basis step-up to fair market value on the date of death, wiping out the decedent’s unrealized capital gain entirely. Heirs who sell soon after inheritance pay capital gains tax only on appreciation AFTER death. The step-up applies to most assets (real estate, stocks, business interests) — but NOT to traditional IRAs or 401(k)s, which retain their original basis (Income in Respect of a Decedent).
Adam Traywick, CPA is the President and founding CPA of Adam Traywick, LLC, a Fort Worth small-business accounting firm. He has over 20 years of experience helping small business owners across home-services trades, hair salons, real estate, and insurance agencies optimize taxes, run cleaner books, and avoid the surprises that come from once-a-year accountants.