Rental Property Tax Deductions 2026: The NYC and New Jersey Landlord Playbook

By Abdul Chowdhury | Dynamic Tax & Accounting


At a Glance

  • 100% bonus depreciation is permanently restored under the OBBBA — cost segregation studies can now unlock massive first-year deductions on rental property improvements
  • Property taxes on rental properties are fully deductible on Schedule E — no SALT cap applies to investment property
  • The $25,000 rental loss allowance lets active landlords offset W-2 income — but it phases out between $100K and $150K in MAGI
  • Standard depreciation on residential rental property is over 27.5 years; a cost segregation study can accelerate components to 5, 7, or 15 years and unlock bonus depreciation
  • The SALT cap raised to $40,400 under the OBBBA — NYC and NJ landlords who itemize on their personal return can now deduct far more in state and local taxes
  • 1031 exchanges remain fully intact — still the most powerful tool for deferring capital gains when repositioning your portfolio
  • NYC property assessments rose 5.4% for 2026-27; multifamily values jumped 6.9% — higher taxes, but fully deductible as rental expenses
  • Dynamic Tax & Accounting provides cost segregation analysis, 1031 exchange planning, and entity structuring for landlords in Queens, the Bronx, Totowa NJ, Buffalo, and nationwide

If you own rental property in New York City or New Jersey, 2026 is shaping up to be one of the best tax years you’ve had in a while. Between permanently restored depreciation rules, a higher SALT cap, and several lesser-known rental property tax deductions that landlords routinely miss, there’s real money to be saved — if you know where to look. Whether you’re a first-time landlord in Queens or a seasoned investor managing a Bronx portfolio, the right tax strategy makes a measurable difference.

What follows is a complete guide to the rental property tax deductions and strategies that matter most in 2026: the headline wins from recent legislation, the deductions that most landlords leave on the table, and the more advanced moves that serious investors use to keep more of what they earn. If you’ve been wondering how to reduce taxes on rental income in NYC or searching for a real estate tax accountant who knows the local landscape, this guide is the place to start.

Real estate investor and landlord holding property keys in front of NYC apartment building
Strategic tax planning helps landlords keep more of their rental income.

Signs You’re Leaving Money on the Table as a Landlord

  • You own rental property but have never had a cost segregation study done
  • You’re depreciating all of your property improvements at the 27.5-year residential rate
  • You deduct property taxes on your rental as a personal expense (SALT cap) instead of a Schedule E business expense
  • You’ve heard of the $25,000 rental loss allowance but aren’t sure if you qualify
  • You’re thinking about selling a rental property and don’t know what a 1031 exchange is
  • Your rental is held in your personal name rather than in an LLC
  • You’re paying a property manager but haven’t reviewed whether their fees are being fully deducted
  • You’re close to the $100,000 MAGI threshold where the rental loss allowance phases out

If two or more of these describe your situation, this guide is for you.


Step 1: Understand the Rental Property Depreciation Opportunity

The IRS allows you to depreciate residential rental property over 27.5 years using MACRS. For a building purchased at $350,000 (not counting land):

$350,000 ÷ 27.5 years = $12,727 per year

At a 22% marginal tax rate, that saves $2,800 per year in federal taxes. This is the baseline every residential rental owner should be taking on Schedule E (Form 1040).

See IRS Publication 527 for the full rules. Also file Form 4562 each year to claim your deductions.


Step 2: Use a Cost Segregation Study to Supercharge Your First-Year Deductions

Cost segregation breaks a property down into components with shorter depreciation lives:

  • 5-year property: Appliances, carpeting, certain fixtures, specialty lighting
  • 7-year property: Office equipment, certain personal property
  • 15-year property: Land improvements — parking areas, fences, landscaping, sidewalks, certain HVAC components

Under the OBBBA, 100% bonus depreciation has been permanently restored. Items in the 5-, 7-, and 15-year categories now qualify for 100% first-year deduction.

The dollar impact:

A Queens landlord purchases a $600,000 multifamily property (land: $100,000, building: $500,000). A cost segregation study identifies $80,000 in 5-year property and $40,000 in 15-year property.

Without cost segregation: Year-one depreciation = $500,000 ÷ 27.5 = $18,182

With cost segregation + 100% bonus depreciation:

  • 5-year property: 100% × $80,000 = $80,000
  • 15-year property: 100% × $40,000 = $40,000
  • 27.5-year structure: $380,000 ÷ 27.5 = $13,818
  • Total year-one deduction: $133,818

The difference: $133,818 vs. $18,182 — nearly 7× larger. At a 32% marginal rate, that’s $42,822 in tax savings in year one.

According to the National Association of Realtors, cost segregation is consistently one of the highest-ROI tax strategies for real estate investors.


Step 3: Know What Landlord Tax Deductions You Can Claim on Schedule E

Mortgage Interest: Fully deductible on Schedule E with no dollar cap, per 1-800Accountant. A $400,000 balance at 6.5% generates approximately $26,000 in annual interest — fully deductible.

Property Taxes — Fully Deductible, No Cap: The SALT deduction cap does not apply to property taxes on investment property. Property taxes on rentals are deducted on Schedule E with no cap, according to Steadily.

In NYC, where assessed property values rose 5.4% for 2026-27, your property tax bills are increasing — but every dollar is deductible against rental income.

Repairs vs. Improvements: Repairs are deductible immediately. Improvements must be capitalized and depreciated. The IRS De Minimis Safe Harbor rule lets you expense any single item costing $2,500 or less per invoice.

Also deductible: Insurance premiums, travel/mileage (70 cents per mile), property management fees (8-12% of gross rents), software subscriptions, legal fees, and accounting/tax preparation fees.


Step 4: Maximize the $25,000 Rental Loss Allowance in 2026

If you actively participate in managing your rental, you can deduct up to $25,000 in rental losses against your ordinary income under IRS Publication 925.

Phase-out: Between $100,000 and $150,000 in MAGI:

  • At $100,000 MAGI: Full $25,000 allowance
  • At $125,000 MAGI: $12,500 allowance
  • At $150,000 MAGI: $0 — losses become suspended passive losses

Example: A Bronx landlord has $75,000 in W-2 income and a rental property showing a $15,000 loss on Schedule E. Because MAGI is below the threshold, the $15,000 loss offsets W-2 income directly. At a 22% rate, that’s $3,300 in federal tax savings.

Strategies to preserve the allowance: Maximize pre-tax retirement contributions, defer income where possible, and consider real estate professional status election (750+ hours per year).


Step 5: The SALT Cap Change — What It Means for Your Personal Return

The cap rose from $10,000 to $40,400 for 2026, with a phase-out starting at $505,000 in MAGI.

Important distinction: Property taxes on your personal residence are subject to the SALT cap. Property taxes on rental properties are deducted separately on Schedule E with no cap.

For NJ landlords: Governor Sherrill’s 2026 budget proposal includes modifications to the Stay NJ program, according to Kiplinger.


Step 6: 1031 Exchanges in NYC — Still the Most Powerful Exit Strategy

Section 1031 like-kind exchanges remain fully intact under the OBBBA, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The rules: Identify replacement property within 45 days, close within 180 days, equal or greater value, use a qualified intermediary.

Example: A Jamaica, Queens landlord purchased a two-family home for $300,000 fifteen years ago, now worth $900,000. Taxable gain = $709,500. Through a 1031 exchange, the entire $175,000+ tax bill is deferred.


Step 7: Entity Structure — Are You Holding Rental Property the Right Way?

Personal name: Simple but no liability protection.

Single-member LLC: Liability protection, taxed identically to personal name.

Multi-member LLC or partnership: Requires Form 1065 and Schedule K-1s.

S-Corporation: Generally not recommended for rental-only activity.

For NYC and NJ landlords with multiple properties, a series LLC or holding company structure can provide both liability protection and tax efficiency.


How Dynamic Tax & Accounting Helps NYC and NJ Landlords

At Dynamic Tax & Accounting, we work with rental property owners and real estate investors throughout New York City — including Queens and the Bronx — as well as Totowa NJ, Buffalo, and virtually nationwide.

  • Cost segregation coordination with engineering firms for properties throughout Queens, the Bronx, and our New Jersey office in Totowa NJ
  • Depreciation review and Form 3115 filings for missed deductions
  • 1031 exchange planning for NYC and NJ investors
  • Rental loss allowance optimization and MAGI threshold strategies
  • Entity structuring for liability protection and tax efficiency
  • Schedule E preparation capturing every deductible expense
  • NJ and NYC-specific guidance on property tax classes, landlord regulations, and state-specific wrinkles

Frequently Asked Questions

What rental property tax deductions can I claim in 2026?

In 2026, landlords can claim mortgage interest, property taxes (fully deductible with no SALT cap on investment property), depreciation, insurance premiums, repairs, management fees, travel expenses, and professional services on Schedule E. With 100% bonus depreciation restored, a cost segregation study can dramatically increase first-year deductions.

How does a cost segregation study benefit rental property owners in 2026?

A cost segregation study reclassifies components into shorter depreciation categories (5, 7, or 15 years). In 2026, those components qualify for 100% bonus depreciation — meaning a landlord who paid $600,000 for a multifamily building could deduct over $133,000 in year one instead of $18,000.

How can I reduce taxes on rental income in NYC?

Claim all allowable Schedule E deductions, conduct a cost segregation study, utilize the $25,000 rental loss allowance, hold property in an appropriately structured LLC, and execute a 1031 exchange when selling. Working with a real estate tax accountant like Dynamic Tax & Accounting ensures you’re not leaving deductions on the table.

Where can I find a rental property tax accountant near me in Queens or the Bronx?

Dynamic Tax & Accounting serves landlords throughout Queens (Jamaica, Flushing, Astoria) and the Bronx (Mott Haven, Pelham Bay, Fordham), as well as Totowa NJ and Buffalo. Reach us at (646) 295-3811 or visit www.dynamicsrv.com/contact-us-2/.


Contact Us

Contact our team — your rental properties are working hard for you — make sure your tax strategy is too.

Phone: (646) 295-3811
Email: admin@dynamicsrv.com
Online: www.dynamicsrv.com/contact-us-2/


Resources


Our Offices

Bronx Office: 2044 McGraw Ave., Bronx, NY 10462
Queens Office: 168-29 Hillside Ave. 2C, Jamaica, NY 11432
Buffalo Office: 1989 Clinton St, Buffalo, NY 14206
New Jersey Office: 63 Union Blvd. Totowa, NJ 07512


Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Individual circumstances vary. Please consult a qualified tax professional before making financial decisions.

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