The recently passed One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) is a sweeping overhaul of the tax code and infrastructure policy that delivers substantial benefits for real estate investors across the country. Whether you're a developer, a buy-and-hold landlord, or a syndicator, this bill has provisions designed to potentially reduce your tax burden, enhance your returns, and open the door to new investment opportunities. Here's a breakdown of the most impactful benefits:
For real estate investors operating through pass-through entities such as LLCs, S-corps, or partnerships, the QBI deduction has been a cornerstone tax benefit since 2017. The new bill makes this 20% deduction permanent, meaning you can continue to deduct 20% of your qualified rental income from your taxable income, assuming you meet IRS requirements. This is especially significant for high-cash-flow properties and syndication models where net income is passed through to investors.
One of the most powerful provisions in the OBBBA is the return of 100% bonus depreciation through 2030. This allows investors to fully deduct the cost of certain property improvements, appliances, and other short-lived assets in the first year of ownership. Coupled with cost segregation studies, this means significant front-loaded deductions, possibly boosting early-year after tax cash flows and providing a compelling incentive for property upgrades or acquisitions.
Under the bill, the limit on deducting business interest reverts to 30% of EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization), instead of EBIT. Since real estate operations often have large non-cash expenses like depreciation, using EBITDA increases the threshold for allowable deductions. This change helps highly leveraged investors retain more of any possible cash flow.
Originally created as part of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, Opportunity Zones have been supercharged under the OBBBA. Not only are they made permanent, but they now include a new category: Qualified Rural Opportunity Zones. Investments held for five years gain a 10% basis step-up, while those held for ten years can eliminate capital gains taxes entirely. These enhancements make long-term OZ investments more attractive, especially in underdeveloped and rural markets.
To spur affordable housing development, the bill increases the allocation for 9% LIHTCs by 12% and lowers the bond-financing threshold to 25%. This creates new opportunities for developers to pursue mixed-income or fully affordable housing projects with better funding prospects and more favorable tax treatment.
Despite speculation that 1031 exchanges would be curtailed, the OBBBA preserves them in full. This allows investors to continue deferring capital gains taxes when selling a property and reinvesting the proceeds into another like-kind property. This cornerstone of real estate investing strategy remains intact, enabling the possibility of continued portfolio growth without immediate tax consequences.
For residential real estate owners, the bill maintains the mortgage interest deduction for acquisition debt up to $750,000. This provision is especially beneficial for investor-owners of small multifamily properties and single-family rentals. Although fewer taxpayers itemize due to increased standard deductions, those who do can still benefit from this write-off.
The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction cap has been raised to $40,000 for filers making under $500,000, providing welcome relief to investors in high-tax states like California, New York, and New Jersey. By reclaiming more of their state tax payments on their federal return, investors can realize meaningful annual savings.
Another investor-friendly change allows residential developers to defer recognizing income on construction contracts until the property is substantially complete. This more accurately aligns taxable income with actual cash flow events and helps reduce tax burdens during the build-out phase of large-scale residential projects.
In spite of containing many controversial provisions, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act brings a host of strategic tax advantages and long-term planning tools for real estate investors. From permanent deductions and favorable depreciation rules to expanded affordable housing incentives and enhanced Opportunity Zones, this legislation rewards active participation in real estate markets. Investors should consult with their tax advisors and financial planners to strive to take full advantage of these provisions.
For savvy investors, now may be the ideal time to expand portfolios, improve assets, or explore development in newly incentivized regions.
For further information on how this may impact your real estate investing strategies, please contact the professionals at First Guardian Group at info@firstguardiangroup.com or schedule a no-obligation consultation today!