The Two Tests That Define REPS
The $25,000 active-participation allowance phases out 50¢ per dollar of MAGI between $100K and $150K. Above $150K, it is zero — REPS or the STR exception is the only path to deducting losses against W-2 income.
| Label | Deductible Passive Loss Allowance ($) |
|---|---|
| MAGI $80K | $25,000 |
| MAGI $100K | $25,000 |
| MAGI $125K | $12,500 |
| MAGI $140K | $5,000 |
| MAGI $150K+ | $0 |
To qualify under IRC §469(c)(7), you (or your spouse on a joint return) must satisfy both of the following in the tax year:
- The 750-hour test: You spent more than 750 hours during the tax year in real-property trades or businesses in which you materially participated.
- The more-than-half-time test: More than 50% of all the personal services you performed in any trade or business during the tax year were performed in real-property trades or businesses in which you materially participated.
The half-time test is what disqualifies most coastal landlords with day jobs. If you are a 2,000-hour-per-year W-2 software engineer, you would need to spend more than 2,000 hours on real-property activities to qualify — effectively impossible. This is why the spouse-election strategy matters: on a joint return, only one spouse needs to qualify. A non-working or part-time-working spouse with the time to manage the portfolio is the most common path.
"REPS converts coastal rental losses from capped, suspended carryforward into unlimited deductions against W-2 income — but only if you survive the 750-hour and half-time tests."
What Counts as a Real-Property Trade or Business
The statute lists eleven qualifying activities. For coastal SFR owners, the relevant ones are:
- Real property rental — managing your own rentals (the obvious one).
- Real property operation or management — including STR operations, leasing, tenant relations, repairs.
- Acquisition, conversion, or improvement — sourcing, due diligence, renovations, ADU/JADU build-outs.
- Brokerage — if you hold a CA real estate license and actively broker.
Hours worked as a W-2 employee for a real-property business count only if you own at least 5% of the employer.
Material Participation in Each Activity
Passing the 750-hour and half-time tests gets you to the door. To deduct the losses from a specific rental, you also need to materially participate in that rental. The IRS gives seven tests; you only need to pass one. The two that coastal owners most often use:
- Test 1 — 500 hours per activity: You spent more than 500 hours on this specific rental during the year.
- Test 4 — significant participation activity: You spent more than 100 hours and no one else spent more time. This is hard to claim if you use a property manager who logs more hours than you do.
The Single-Activity Election (Reg. §1.469-9(g))
By default, each rental property is its own activity, meaning you would need to materially participate in each. Most coastal landlords with multiple doors file the aggregation election — treating all rental real estate interests as one activity. This is irrevocable absent a material change in facts and circumstances, and must be filed with a timely return. Without it, owning four SFRs and meeting the 500-hour test on none of them would disqualify you from REPS-level loss deductions on all four.
Documentation: What the IRS Actually Wants

The Tax Court has rejected REPS claims supported by reconstructed calendars, "ballpark" estimates, and post-audit time logs. Acceptable documentation:
- Contemporaneous time log kept throughout the year — date, activity, hours, property. Spreadsheets, time-tracking apps, or paper logs all work; what matters is that the entry was created near the date of the activity.
- Corroborating evidence: contractor invoices showing site visits, emails to tenants, calendar entries with timestamps, mileage logs, photos with timestamps.
- Aggregation-election statement attached to your timely-filed return.
Hours that don't count: investor activities (reviewing financial statements, studying markets, planning the portfolio). Time spent on the books is investor time, not real-property time. This is why outsourcing bookkeeping while doing your own leasing and maintenance is the operationally clean play.
What Disqualifies Coastal Landlords Specifically

The patterns we see most often:
- Using a full-service property manager. If your PM handles tenant placement, maintenance dispatch, rent collection, and inspections, you will struggle to get to 500 hours per activity — because the PM is doing the work. Using a leasing-only service while you self-manage the rest is the workable middle ground.
- Vacation use. If you spend 14+ days personally using a coastal property, it converts to a personal residence under §280A and the loss is disallowed regardless of REPS status. Track personal-use days separately.
- STRs with average stay under 7 days. Short-term rentals are not rental activities under §469 — they are businesses. The good news: you can deduct STR losses without REPS, just by materially participating. The bad: STR hours don't count toward your 750-hour test for the rental side of the portfolio. Mixed coastal portfolios often need separate strategies for LTR and STR doors.
A Real Coastal REPS Scenario
Joint filers, $450K W-2 income, three Newport Beach SFRs after a $1.6M cost-segregation study. Without REPS the entire $410K loss suspends. With REPS (1099 spouse qualifies), it offsets the W-2 income directly.
| Label | Year-1 Federal Tax Saved ($) |
|---|---|
| No REPS (loss suspends) | $0 |
| With REPS (full offset) | $143,500 |

Owner profile: 1099 contractor spouse working 1,200 hours/year on the rentals; W-2 working spouse earning $450K. Portfolio: three Newport Beach SFRs (LTR), one Laguna Beach STR. After a $1.6M cost-segregation study on the SFRs, year-1 paper loss across the portfolio is $410,000.
- Without REPS: $0 deductible against W-2 income (AGI > $150K phaseout). The $410K rolls forward as a passive loss carryforward.
- With REPS (1099 spouse qualifies; aggregation election filed): $410K deductible against the $450K W-2 income. Federal tax savings at 35% bracket: ~$143,500 in year one alone.
Audit Risk and the Conservative Path

REPS is on the IRS's short list of audit triggers when paired with high W-2 income and large Schedule E losses. Run REPS like you expect to be audited:
- Keep a contemporaneous time log every week, not at year-end.
- File the aggregation election on a timely return — you cannot add it later.
- Document material participation per property if you don't aggregate.
- Retain corroborating evidence (texts, emails, invoices) that lines up with logged hours.
- Use a CPA who has defended REPS in audit or Tax Court before.
For owners closer to the threshold, our passive-loss strategy guide covers the alternative paths — including the STR exception and suspended-loss disposition strategy.



