My biggest pet peeve is bad bookkeeping. The problem is that bookkeeping required from real estate investors does not make a lot of sense (some will claim "none"). Even if you hire a bookkeeper, chances are you will not get a good job done - unless your bookkeeper is expert in real estate business.
My goal here is very modest: help people who understand general bookkeeping - but not real estate bookkeeping - get a decent job done. If this is not enough, please check out my
more detailed guides.
Separation is required *
Business income & expenses must be separated from
personal - even if you use the same account.
* Income and expenses must be separated between different businesses - even if you run all of them.
* Closely related businesses can be combined. Example: realtor + wholesaler + mortgage broker.
* Operating
rentals is always a separate business from other investments, such as
flips or
rehabs.
* Income and expenses must be separate for each
rental property, and usually for each flip/rehab too.
Recording of business expenses * For each expense, 4 elements
must be recorded: date, how much, who it was paid to, and what for.
* Each expense will need a
category for taxes. For a detailed list of categories, see my
RE Investor's Introduction to Bookkeeping guide.
* If not using my guides and organizers, use categories from the IRS schedules C and E.
* Avoid vague categories like "other" and "miscellaneous." Itemize expenses that are hard to label.
* Expenses count for tax purposes when they are either paid by cash/check or when charged on credit.
Bookkeeping for rental properties * Each property must be recorded separately.
* There are also "general business
overhead" expenses not specific to any property.
* All expenses
prior to the "placed in service" date (such as initial rehab) are part of the property cost.
* After the "placed in service" date, it's critical to separate current repairs from improvements.
Bookkeeping for non-rental businesses, including flipping/rehabbing * All expenses
prior to the "start" date (such as legal and education) are "start-up" expenses.
* All costs related to a specific flip/rehab property are accumulated until the property is
sold.
* There are special requirements for retail/wholesale businesses that keep
inventory for resale.
Bookkeeping for business use of automobile * The IRS requires
written log of your business-related mileage: when, where, why, how far.
* In addition to the log, it is helpful to keep track of all actual
expenses related to the automobile.
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