Owning rentals is rarely as simple as collecting rent each month. Between routine bills, surprise repairs, and tax-time recordkeeping, rental expenses can pile up quickly—especially if you don’t plan for them or track them consistently.
The good news: once you understand how rental property expenses are categorized, you can budget with more confidence and capture the deductions you’re entitled to. Below is a practical breakdown of the major expense types landlords commonly run into, how they’re treated for tax purposes, and how to stay organized all year.
What Counts as a Rental Expense?
In general, a rental expense is money you spend to operate your for-profit rental business—think utilities, maintenance, transportation, and similar costs. The big advantage of tracking these costs carefully is that many of them can be deductible, which can reduce your taxable rental income later.
Because the IRS treats different expense categories differently, it’s worth understanding where your costs fall before you file. Misclassifying items (or failing to document them) can reduce your deductions and make it harder to see your true cash flow.
The Main Kinds of Rental Property Expenses
Most landlord costs fall into a few common buckets. These buckets matter because they affect when you can deduct an expense and how you report it.
Operating Expenses
Operating expenses are the day-to-day costs of running a rental—what many people mean when they talk about rental property operating expenses. These are typically deductible in the same year they’re incurred, as long as they meet key requirements:
- Ordinary and necessary: The expense should be typical for rental operations and help your business in a clear way.
- Current: It should benefit your rental business for less than one year (it’s “used up” within the year).
- Directly related to rental activity: Not personal use.
- Reasonable in amount: Not unnecessarily expensive for the result you’re getting.
Common operating expense examples include:
- Advertising and marketing (like paid listings)
- Tenant screening services (credit, criminal, eviction checks)
- Property taxes
- Insurance premiums
- Utilities (only the portion you pay—if tenants pay part, you deduct only what you cover)
- Property management and professional fees (property managers, staff, accountants)
- Repairs and maintenance (pest control, landscaping, snow removal, and other upkeep—not improvements)
- Homeowners association dues (if required for the property)
- Travel tied to rental activity (vehicle costs, gas, etc.)
- Tenant turnover costs (cleaning, replacing keys, and similar move-out expenses)
A key point: repairs that keep the property functional generally fall here, while upgrades that improve or extend the property’s life generally do not.
Start-up Expenses
Start-up expenses are costs you incur before a unit is ready to rent. These expenses can be deducted differently than operating costs: you may be able to deduct up to $5,000 in the first year you’re in business, and then spread the remaining amount out evenly over the next 15 years.
To qualify, start-up costs still need to be ordinary and necessary, current, rental-related, and reasonable. You also generally need your rental activity to be treated as a business (not just a passive investment activity).
Examples of start-up expenses can include:
- Office supplies
- Minor repairs
- Employee search and training
- License and permit fees
- Insurance premiums
- Website-building costs
- Advertising
Examples of costs that are not treated as start-up expenses in this context include:
- Improvements
- Travel expenses
- Interest and taxes
- Real property purchases
- Research and experimental costs
- Mortgage payments
If you’re new to rentals, this category is easy to overlook—so it’s smart to set up your tracking system before your first tenant ever moves in.
Capital Expenses
Capital expenses are long-term investments that improve a property or increase its value. These are the expenses landlords most often confuse with operating costs.
A simple way to think about it:
- Repair: Fixes something that’s broken or restores function (often an operating expense).
- Improvement: Upgrades, renovations, or replacements that add value or extend life (often a capital expense).
Capital expenses generally aren’t deducted all at once in the year you pay for them. Instead, they are typically depreciated—meaning you deduct a portion each year over the asset’s useful life.
For property to qualify for depreciation, it must generally be something you own, use in your business, have a determinable useful life, and expect to last more than one year.
Pass-through Tax Deductions
Some landlords may also qualify for pass-through deductions, which can allow you to deduct up to 20% of net rental income from income tax—effectively lowering how much of that income is taxed.
To qualify, your rental activity typically needs to be treated as a business (not a nonprofit or purely an investment), and you’ll need to meet applicable requirements (including safe harbor rules) and have qualified business income (QBI). If you’re unsure where you fall, it’s worth consulting a tax professional.
How to Report Rental Expenses
Capturing deductions starts with documentation. At tax time, landlords commonly report rental income and expenses on Schedule E, where expenses are grouped into 15 categories (such as advertising and insurance).
The more organized and thorough your records are, the easier it is to report accurately—and the more likely you are to minimize taxable rental income without scrambling in April.
Managing Rental Expenses Without the Headache
Even experienced landlords can feel buried by receipts and renewals. Two practical options can make this easier:
- A rental property expenses spreadsheet that lists each property, income, and all expenses in one place (helpful for tracking trends and profit over time)
- Cloud-based software that stores income and expense data securely and makes it easier to access, categorize, and review throughout the year
Whichever method you choose, consistency matters more than perfection. If you track rental property expenses monthly, you’ll make better decisions—and you’ll be far better prepared when tax season arrives.
