BiggerPockets Real Estate Podcast - 569: Rich Dad's CPA Shares 5 Steps to Eliminate Income Taxes through Real Estate w/Tom Wheelwright

Episode Date: February 10, 2022

If you’re asking your CPA how to not pay taxes, this may be the perfect episode for you. In fact, this episode is geared towards anyone making money in real estate, and listening could save you a ma...ssive amount in taxes over your lifetime. But isn’t tax reduction only for the ultra-rich? How can the average, everyday investor who has one, two, or a dozen rentals keep more of their capital so they can invest in more deals? Tom Wheelwright is the exact man to ask this question to. He’s so good at what he does, that he’s been advising Rich Dad Poor Dad’s Robert Kiyosaki for decades. Tom is dedicated to minimizing the tax burden that he and other investors suffer from. If you’ve read Rich Dad Poor Dad, a lot of Tom’s strategy will sound familiar, but in reality, it’s what all intelligent investors are doing. In today’s episode, Tom walks through the biggest areas where real estate investors can cut their tax bills, how to generate losses through depreciation, building an investment system, and the five steps to eliminating income tax from your real estate deals. If you make money in real estate, no matter how, this is information you can NOT live without. In This Episode We Cover: Why rich investors pay fewer taxes than those who are employed or self-employed Tax incentives vs. loopholes and why one is risky and the other is celebrated Where investors can look to greatly reduce their taxable income  How real estate debt gives investors far less risk in their deals Deprecation, recapture, and how real estate gives you a leg up on income tax reduction Whether or not you should hold a real estate investment in an LLC And So Much More! Links from the Show: BiggerPockets Website BiggerPockets Youtube Channel BiggerPockets Podcast BiggerPockets Podcast 500: Robert Kiyosaki: America’s ‘Rich Dad’ Sees a Real Estate Crash Coming Amazon Airbnb Invest with David Greene The CASHFLOW GAME by Robert Kiyosaki The Real Estate Strategies Podcast with Ken McElroy: QUITTING Your 9-5 for Real Estate Investing (with BiggerPockets' David Greene) Ken McElroy's Official Website Robert Kiyosaki's Official Website Listen to the full episode: https://www.biggerpockets.com/show569 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Bigger Pockets podcast show. 569. So they're saying, look, if you invest in real estate, we'll give you a better deal than if you've invested in the stock market. Literally that is built into the law. And so, you know, that just, once we understand it, now we have a choice. And the goal here is the more education we have, and this is why I love Bigger Pockets, the more education we have, the better our choices.
Starting point is 00:00:31 What's going on, everyone. It's David Green, your host of the Bigger Pockets podcast, where we arm you in. the information that you need to start building long-term wealth through real estate today. If you're new here and you like today's show, check out biggerpockets.com. It's the website that hosts the podcast. It's a free one-stop shop for all things real estate investing. It'll help you save time and money, avoid mistakes, and tap into the wisdom of two million fellow members. Now on today's show, we are joined by an awesome guest. You are going to love this show if you've ever wondered, how do the wealthy not pay taxes?
Starting point is 00:01:06 Today we have Tom Willwright. Now, on episode 500, Brandon Turner and I interviewed Robert Kiyosaki, the author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad. And Tom is Robert CPA and owns a CPA firm. He's also a speaker and investor himself, an author of several books. One of them, Tax Free Wealth is sold very, very well and is very well respected within the real estate investing community. And Tom comes on to tackle the question of how do people, particularly wealthy people, avoid paying taxes. How can real estate help you, the listener, to do the same thing? And what is actually happening behind the scenes that make this possible? Now, I remember at one point when I heard people
Starting point is 00:01:47 talk about Elon Musk doesn't pay taxes, Donald Trump doesn't pay taxes, I assumed it must be such a complicated concept that you need. Lawyers that graduated from Harvard working on it, that's not the case at all. It's actually a handful of things that we talk about that will work for most people in most situations that will save you massive, massive amounts of taxes and allow you to reinvest that capital into more real estate. And even more important, it sort of forces you to develop healthy habits when it comes to managing your money so that you can take advantage of this. That's personally why I love it because no one likes paying taxes, but you can't just avoid paying them. You have to actually do something different to do that. And the steps you have to
Starting point is 00:02:27 take to avoid paying taxes will make you a better investor, a more disciplined person, and an overall, more prudent and safe investor and steward of your money. Now, Tom's awesome, and I'd like to make sure that you listen all the way to the end of the show. We went a little bit longer than we normally do, specific as he was just dropping fire. And I thought, hey, if this takes two listens to get through, that's better than not getting information from Tom will, right? They can save everybody a lot of money, even if it's something that isn't going to save you money today.
Starting point is 00:02:55 As you grow in your investing journey, this stuff will become very important. If you can make it to the end, Tom actually breaks apart. my businesses, my tax situation, how I'm structured. It gives me some advice on how I could be doing things better, safer, and more prudently. I'd love for you to be able to hear that. I also want to make sure you guys learn the concepts we talk about today because they are not nearly as complicated as I originally thought, probably not as scary as you. There's a really good section where we talk about, should I do an LLC?
Starting point is 00:03:23 Should I invest in my own name? And what is the difference? As an LLC even help me? And if so, how? And then Tom shares some of his five steps for how you can get started. at the end. So I love today's show. I really think you're going to also please consider sharing this with anyone you know who's interested in saving in taxes. Make sure you follow us on BiggerPockets YouTube page so you can watch the interaction between us and then comment, like,
Starting point is 00:03:47 and share with anyone that you care about. All right, today's quick tip is our podcast has a new landing page. It's BiggerPockets.com slash podcast. This is where you can see all the shows that we're putting out across the entire Bigger Pockets network. So make sure that you, you save that one in your browser or you save it in your phone. So whenever you want a podcast listen to or you feel like you want to be able to make some money and build some wealth, you know exactly where to go. A lot of property managers think their job is answering tenant emails and coordinating repairs. That's not the job. The job of a property manager is protecting and growing your operating income and earning your trust while they do it. And that comes down to
Starting point is 00:04:27 three numbers, occupancy, delinquency, and net promoter score. If those, numbers slip, your income slips, and your trust slips too. And most PMs don't hold themselves to performance standards. They focus on activity, not outcomes. Mind is different. They obsess over the metrics that actually grow your cash flow. Go to mine.com slash show me to see how mine performs and get a month of management for free. Because if you're going to hire a property manager, hire one that manages your investment like an investment. We all joke that rentals are passive, but if you're spending nights matching receipts or guessing what a property earned last month, that's not passive at all. Base lane fixes that part of landlording, the financial chaos. Their banking and
Starting point is 00:05:11 AI bookkeeping system automatically tags every transaction, updates cash flow insights in real time, and builds the reports you need for tax season. You can even automate transfers and move money around without paying wire fees. It's just cleaner. Sign up at baselane.com slash BP and get a $100 bonus. Baseline is a financial technology company and not a bank. Banking services provided by Threadbank. Member FDIC. Most investors spend more time chasing deals than reviewing their insurance. But a quick coverage check can be fast, easy, and one of the smartest ways to protect and even improve your property's cash flow. As the months get colder, frozen pipes, icy walkways, and seasonal wear and tear can increase the likelihood of claims.
Starting point is 00:05:48 And traditional insurance companies aren't always built to handle these claims quickly or smoothly. That's why more real estate investors are turning to steadily. They focus exclusively on landlords, whether it's a single-family rental, a burr-builder's risk, policy or midterm holiday guests. You get fast quotes, flexible coverage, and protection for property damage, liability, and even loss of rental income. Now is the perfect time to review your rates and coverage. Get a quote in minutes at biggerpockets.com slash landlord insurance. Steadily, landlord insurance designed for the modern investor. After you listen to this one, if you're curious for a little more background on this topic,
Starting point is 00:06:26 please check out episode 500 of the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast where Brandon and I interview Robert Kiyosaki, which is how we ended up getting here with Tom himself. Hope you enjoy it. Mr. Tom Will Wright, welcome to the Bigger Pockets podcast. It's great to have you. It's great to be here. Thanks for having me. Now, Tom, you've written a very impressive book that many real estate investors have read and loved, and that was Tax-Free Wealth, which is just a great name for a book who doesn't want tax-free wealth. And my understanding is you have another book coming out. Can you tell me a little bit about this up-and-coming book? I do very excited. It's called incentives. Seven investments the government will pay you to make.
Starting point is 00:07:06 So very excited about talking about the role of taxes in getting done what the government wants done. So much of life is perspective that we take. And looking at it like you did, these are things the government will pay you to do to grow your wealth is a great way of looking at it, especially because so many other people benefit if you do it, as opposed to looking at it as a way that greedy, shady people can hide from their responsibility. to pay their own fair share. Now, we recently interviewed one of your partners, Robert Kiyosaki, and he mentioned you on the show. We're going to talk about that in a minute. But before we get into that, I want to play a clip from an interview with Robert, and then we're going to get your feedback on that.
Starting point is 00:07:44 So let's go ahead and start with that. Ray Kroc, founder of McDonald's. And my friend who was at the University of Texas, he was talking to Ray Kroc, and he said something about, you know, Ray, what business are you in? I mean, Ray says, what business is written McDonald's? in and everybody says, hamburgers. And Ray said, no. McDonald's is a real estate company.
Starting point is 00:08:07 And today, I think they own more real estate than the Catholic Church. And so back in the 70s, when I was trying to figure my life out, my rich dad said the same thing. It says the purpose of a business is to buy real estate. And if you understand that,
Starting point is 00:08:25 your brain will shift. But it's not about starting a business to make money. The purpose of a business is to acquire real estate so you can use massive amounts of debt and pay no taxes. I mean, that's why I do it. All right. So as you saw, Robert talked about that the purpose of a business is to buy real estate. And you can use massive amounts of debt and not pay taxes.
Starting point is 00:08:50 And that's why he actually does it. This is obviously a hot button topic because the minute that some multimillionaire says, I don't pay taxes, it upsets people. I'd love it if you could give your perspective on what that actually means and how it plays out in real life. Yeah. So let's do this. Let me share my screen here. And you can, let's actually look at Robert's cash flow quadrant here. And if you look at this cash flow quadrant, you see, well, really, there's four ways that people make money. They make it as an employee. We've all been employees at some point, self-employed as a big business or as a professional investor. What's interesting
Starting point is 00:09:31 is that how much tax you pay depends largely on how you make your money. So if you make your money as an employee, you're typically going to pay tax at around 40% if you make a good income. If you get more education, you become a doctor, lawyer, et cetera, now you get to pay 60%. If you're a big business owner, you tend to pay around 20%, which is, by the way, why Warren Buffett said that he pays less tax than a secretary, because he's paying at a 20% rate. She's paying at a 40% rate. And if you're a professional investor, you can pay zero. So what Robert does is, and this is what everybody who knows how the tax law works does, is he takes his money, let's say goes out and speaks and makes money speaking. He puts it into investing. He combines it with debt. buys an investment, or if he makes money his business, combines it with debt and puts it in to an investment. And the investment he likes his real estate. Now, it doesn't have to be real estate. Could be agriculture, could be energy, could be a business. But this is how the tax law, by the way, in every country, it's not just the U.S. Every country works this way. Okay? And the reason is because,
Starting point is 00:10:43 look, what does the government want? They want tax dollars, but they also want certain things to happen. They want energy, they want housing, and up here, they want jobs, and then they want food. Okay? So they are going to saying, look, if you take the risk, you're the entrepreneur, and you put your money where we want it, we'll encourage you to do that by giving you a tax incentives. And it's really that simple. I want to jump in briefly to highlight what you said, because that's the part that doesn't come up when we talk about, I pay no taxes. When we look at this quadrant that you've drawn out for us and
Starting point is 00:11:22 we're in the E area, the employee, their taxes are high, but their risk is low. Employees don't contribute capital to their own company. When you become self-employed, your taxes are high, but your risk is lower. There is absolutely a relationship between the risk you take and the tax benefits that you get. It isn't free. And that's what I wanted to highlight is the government is incentivizing you to do this because no one likes risk. Risk is inherently expensive. You have to put that on a sheet somewhere to account for the risk you're taking and how you could lose something. And what we're actually talking about is investing is a way of sort of like writing this wave of risk and reward. And there's some skill that every like just every surfer needs to understand. Is that similar to how you
Starting point is 00:12:07 see it or do you think that there's a more nuanced perspective? Oh, no, for sure. And it's actually even simpler than that. The government actually makes money on it. It's not just, that the government wants housing and they want energy and they want food. They want jobs, obviously. But the government actually makes more money when you have entrepreneurs. For example, let's take an entrepreneur who starts a business. Well, literally you can start a business and the government will pay you for all of the costs of starting that business. And I actually show you that in my new book. And okay, well, what does the government get out of it? Well, they get a share of the income for the rest of your life. And you can never,
Starting point is 00:12:45 get out of that partnership. So the reality is we're all partners with the government. The question is, are we active partners? Are we silent partners? And employees are silent partners, right? Most small business owners are silent partners. But the big business owners, the professional investors, are active partners. We're actively saying, look, we'll do what you want done.
Starting point is 00:13:08 And you'll share basically in the capital it takes to start it. And then we'll share in the profits once we get them. It works. And frankly, they make so much money, and I showed this in my new book, but they make so much money in this that you go, why would they not do this? It's kind of like take Amazon when Amazon was going to set up shop in New York. And politicians, we don't want you because we don't want to give you the tax benefits. I'm going, but they weren't giving tax benefits. They weren't giving the Amazon money. They were just saying, Amazon, you won't have to pay as much tax as you would otherwise have to pay. the government still would have gotten money from that. You know, when Amazon moved and chose another location, that other location said, we'll take it because we'd rather have half the money we were going to get than have none of the money we were going to get. And that's essentially what they're saying.
Starting point is 00:14:01 We'd rather make an investment, the government is saying this, we would rather make an investment and we'll take the risk. You may not make a profit. And then we'll see nothing, but we'll take that risk. because we know that we'll actually make more money if you're successful. And if we can contribute to that success, great. I think part of the problem is when we focus on Amazon as a corporation and we say, well, they're getting tax benefits.
Starting point is 00:14:24 Why are they getting all these loopholes so they don't have to pay? And we don't think about all the employees that Amazon is bringing along that are paying taxes. We don't think about all the houses they're going to have to be built for all these people to live in. We're property taxes. We don't think about all the times they're going to go eat at restaurants or buy things and all of the sales taxes. I mean, there's more than just income tax
Starting point is 00:14:44 that should be accounted for, right? Well, and actually when you look at it, the incentives Amazon was going to get there in New York, for example, it's not income tax incentives. These are property tax and lower property taxes than they would otherwise pay. These are sales taxes that without Amazon there, they're not going to pay, but with Amazon there,
Starting point is 00:15:01 they'll pay, they just pay less or they defer the taxes. So this is not a, it's not like we're taking money that we already have. it's not New York saying money we already have and give it to Amazon. No, no. This is, we're going to share in the profits down the road. So if Amazon would normally pay a billion dollars in taxes down the road, we're going to split that.
Starting point is 00:15:25 We say Amazon, you pay $600 million in taxes and we won't collect the other 400 million because 600 million is better than zero. Which is not uncommon for everyone else in life to do the same thing. If someone comes to me and says, David, I want you to sell my house. And I say, okay, here's our commission. You say, great. What if you're bringing me 10 houses every single month? Wouldn't you expect to have some form of discount on that commission?
Starting point is 00:15:47 And it would be sort of misleading for me to say, Tom is trying to steal money from me because he doesn't want to pay the commission I pay, right? Like, you're actually giving me quite a bit of money. Or better yet, let's say that we go into a business still together. We're going to go develop real estate. And I say, David, so I'm only going to do this. If you'll do it for free, I want all the profits. You're going, why would I do that?
Starting point is 00:16:12 You know, where you say, well, look, what are we always doing? We're competing with other partners and saying, we'll give you a better deal. And that's all the states are doing. The states are just saying, we'll give you a better deal. Well, the federal government is already built into the law. Yes. So they're saying, look, if you invest in real estate, we'll give you a better deal than if you've invested in the stock market. Literally, that is built into the law.
Starting point is 00:16:33 And so, you know, that just, once we understand it, now we have a choice. and the goal here is the more education we have, and this is why I love bigger pockets, the more education we have, the better our choices. You know, this will be a bit of a caveat. I won't go too far down that road, but I see sort of this happening in the opposite sense. What you're talking about are incentives to bring business to an area. So we see that happening in states like Florida or Texas, where they're saying,
Starting point is 00:16:56 bring your business here. We'll give you a reduction because we want all the revenue that's going to have. Well, the state I live in California is constantly talking about raising state income tax. They're now trying to push it upwards of 18%. That's called it disincentive. There you go. And here is what I just want to highlight for the people who hear that and think, well, what's wrong with that?
Starting point is 00:17:15 We're going to get more revenue. We need it. It would be another 5 or 6%. You're not getting an extra 5 or 6% by raising taxes. If people leave, you are actually losing the 13% that you were getting and it goes somewhere else. And so there is a point of diminishing returns where if you ask for too much from a business owner or a resident and they leave, you hurt yourself. You end up getting nothing. Yeah, to that point, actually, you know, I've been in this business for a very long time.
Starting point is 00:17:41 And 40% tax rate is the magic number. When you get over 40% federal tax rate, it starts being a disincentive. That's why 40% is that magic number. And it's that magic number in most countries. That's wonderful. I love that you know that. That's why I'm so glad that you're here right now. So when we interviewed Robert at around 16 minutes, he actually gave you a shout out. refer to your book, Tax-Free Wealth. And he basically explained that taxes are incentives from the government to do what the government wants done, not loopholes. Would you mind sharing your perspective on how we should look at this and then maybe giving some examples of the most common incentives that people can take advantage of? Yeah, sure. Let me give you a first of all definition of loophole.
Starting point is 00:18:24 Loophole is an unintended consequence. So, for example, last year, there was a loophole in cryptocurrency that if you sold at a loss, you can immediately buy the crypto back and you could recognize that loss. That's a loophole. They actually closed that loophole in the infrastructure bill. Okay, so that would be a loophole. An incentive is something they actually thought about and going, what do we want to have happen? And let me give you a simple example that everybody will relate to. Your home mortgage interest deduction. Okay. Now, I will tell you that not all countries give a deduction for home mortgage interest. They do for rental properties, but not for your personal residence. Well, what's the policy there? The policy is simply, we think we have a more stable
Starting point is 00:19:09 population if we incentivize homeownership. And so there's incentives for homeownership. And because if you pay rent, you don't get a deduction for rent, but if you pay on a mortgage, again, go to your risk standpoint, right? No risk with rent. There's risk with a mortgage, because now you own the asset, all right, if I take that risk, but I'm going to get a deduction for that interest. And that's the most common something. Nobody would turn that down. Nobody would call that a loophole. Well, you're also incentivizing people to save money, to invest that money smarter, to buy real estate so that more home builders build more homes. It's, to me, it sounds exactly like what the parent would do where they say, if you get all A's or if you get a grade point average,
Starting point is 00:19:54 I will give you a raise in your allowance. That is. is a natural way that human beings understand things. Yeah, it's interesting. This actually really got going under President Kennedy, right, a Democrat. And he very much looked at tax incentives, and that's where we got the investment tax credit was under John O' Kennedy. So this is something that all countries do. In my new book, we actually look at 15 different countries. And you look at that and you go, wow, this can't be a loophole in every single country, right? And we didn't get the same lobbying from the same people in every single country. What we got instead was, what does the government want done? Let's incentivize it. Let's take some of the risk off. And then we'll take some of the
Starting point is 00:20:34 rewards. This is what's so important about education, because if most people will do what they watch everyone around them doing. So if you just see people working 40 hour a week, W2 jobs, and you are accustomed to zero risk being normal, then any risk seems risky. I mean, I'm probably not articulating that well, but it feels wrong. Like, why would I want to take risk if normal is to have none? But if you grew up in the world 400 years ago or so, where you didn't have all these labor laws and you didn't have a guaranteed job that you could just fall into something like what we have right now, you didn't have an education that was provided for you subsidized by the government. Risk was a normal part of life all the time. And so you didn't need to be educated on your options. It was sort of
Starting point is 00:21:17 right there in front of you. Well, in today's episode, I'm so excited that people are going to have a path painted for them, that when you hear us say you cannot pay taxes as a real estate investor or a investor of any type, this is exactly what you're doing in order to make that happen. It will sort of come alive as if you were living 400 years ago and you were looking at it everywhere that you turned. I think it's also interesting as you get more education. You understand what you kind of change your mind on what's risky and what isn't. For example, I went years ago, I went to work as the in-house tax advisor for a Fortune 1000 company. And my very first task was to lay off half of my department.
Starting point is 00:21:57 We're doing a company-wide layoff. And I'm going, so let me get this straight. If you're an employee, you have one customer. And you are at risk, even if you do a good job. And then I look at, well, what if I start my own firm? Okay, let's say I have 200 clients. Well, if one client fires me, so, okay, but I still have 198 clients, and I just go get another client.
Starting point is 00:22:21 But if I only had one client, think about this, if you went to a bank, you're a business owner, you went to a bank and you had a single client, would they lend to you? Probably not. Probably not. They'll lend to you if you're an employee, but not if you have a single customer as a business owner, which is really interesting. It's just a different assessment of risk. Yeah, that's a very good point.
Starting point is 00:22:39 I also think about if you really wanted to decrease your risk in the world in general, you would build as many skills as you could, right? Like, you don't know what's going to happen. What if our power grid goes out? That's when you're going to find out who has survival skills and who doesn't. And the same happens in sort of the workforce in a capitalistic country. The more skills you have, the less you worry about losing that job. And in my mind, the risk I see in the person who just shows up and does the same thing
Starting point is 00:23:05 every single freaking day for 30 years is they stop building new skills. And they become dependent on that employer and maybe even that specific company, not just that industry that they work in versus someone like you that has several different businesses that is an investor and a business owner, you are forced to build skills all the time. And so you don't live in fear of change. You're not worried about if the tax code changes or the economy changes. We frequently say here, if we have a recession, that's horrible for the most of the country, but we're going to be good. We will know how to adapt and take advantage. And so another reason I just want to encourage everybody to really listen intently to
Starting point is 00:23:41 this show is to understand this will help you build skills, which will ultimately reduce your exposure to risk in life. Right. The more education you have, the less risk you have. Yes. Right, by definition. And that's true in the tax world, too. The better you understand the tax law, people ask me, are you aggressive or conservative? And say, well, let's define that.
Starting point is 00:24:00 Okay. I think aggressive is somebody who does something that's outside their education level. That's aggressive. But if I do something within my education level and I just have a lot more education, I'm conservative. So I like to think that I'm the most conservative accountant in the world or I would like to be because I just want to understand the tax. so well that there's nothing I'm going to do that I'm going to feel is outside my comfort zone.
Starting point is 00:24:25 Yeah, that's the secret to being good at something in life, isn't it? Is you get so good at doing it that you can be aggressive in that area and you're not actually increasing your risk. Right. Okay. So let's talk about sort of what you think are some of the biggest areas where somebody can decrease their taxes. The first one to me, and I'll defer to your expertise here, but it's probably like where
Starting point is 00:24:45 you get the most bang for your bucket possible. it's the full-time real estate professional status. If you want to jump off there and then walk us through your list, that'd be great. First of all, so I would get even one step backwards. And Robert talks about this all time, it's debt, right? So if I invest in real estate, but I put all my own money into it, then my deduction ratio is one to one. But if the bank puts in $4 and I put in $1, my deduction ratio is $5 to $1.
Starting point is 00:25:12 So I'm literally in all of the bank's money, I get tax benefits. for all of the bank's money in addition to my money. And that's why debt and taxes go together. And Robert's always saying debt and taxes will make you rich. It is that combination. I know Robert talked about that in his interview. It is that combination of debt and taxes because by itself, frankly, you're not going to need to be a real estate professional if you're using your own equity for all your
Starting point is 00:25:37 real estate because you're never going to have a loss from your real estate unless it's an economic loss. You're never going to have a tax loss that is what we call a phantom loss. So that's the first thing I would say, David, is that debt piece is actually a pretty important piece. But then the big issue is back in 1986 when I was in Washington, D.C., actually, with the National Tax Office of Ernst & Young, we had this big Reagan tax bill. And part of that tax bill were these passive loss rules. And basically all the passive loss rules said was prior to 1986, if you were a doctor, you were an ERNS, you could invest in any kind of of investment, and if it created losses, you'd get those losses, whether you didn't have any
Starting point is 00:26:22 active participation in that business or that investment or that real estate, whatever. That's what changed in 1986, is all of a sudden it became, okay, if you're a passive investor, passive losses can only offset passive income. Can you give us a brief example of what passive losses or passive income would be in practical terms? Sure. It's actually pretty well defined. what the term that the Internal Revenue Service uses is material participation.
Starting point is 00:26:48 So the general rule is that if you spend more than 500 hours in a business activity, you're active. If you spend less than 500, you're not active. Now, there's six other rules that we won't get into, but that's the primary rule. There are two exceptions to that. The first exception is a negative exception, and that's real estate rental. And real estate rental is, as a general rule, always pass. passive. Real estate rental is always passive. It doesn't matter if you work 500 hours. It's always
Starting point is 00:27:18 passive. Oil and gas investment is always active, whether you work in it or not. Okay, as long as you structure it right, it's always active. So those are the two primary exceptions. Well, active real estate professionals didn't like this idea. So they started lobbying. And in 1993, the lobbyists, which included a fellow by the name of Donald Trump, by the way, just a little tax history there, we're able to change the law and said, well, look, if you're really a real estate professional, you shouldn't be subject to these passive loss limitations even on rental property. And so they made up these rules. And the rules are really simple.
Starting point is 00:27:56 So to be a real estate professional, you have to spend more than 150 hours in real estate, and it's defined what real estate is. There's seven categories. And you have to spend more time in real estate than all your other business activities combined in your day job. Okay. So there was an example where a. A nurse who was a full-time nurse was actually able to prove that she worked more time in real
Starting point is 00:28:17 estate than she did. She actually worked 2,300 hours in real estate and 2,200 hours as a nurse. And I'm going, oh, my heavens, sounds terrible to me. But now, what's interesting is she lost the case. And the reason is is because you really have two rules. The first rule is, remember, real estate rental is by definition passive unless you're real estate professional. But once you meet that rule, you still have to meet the material participation rule. And that is a buy per activity. So she had like 25 different properties. Well, she couldn't meet
Starting point is 00:28:54 500 hours for each property. She didn't qualify to be non-passive in that real estate, even though she was a real estate professional. Gotcha. So real estate professional is just first test. So what you have to do is there's actually an election you make that you can, combine all of your real estate activities into a single activity. And it's literally, it's a section 469C7 election. You probably want to write that down, section 469C7. And you elect to combine all your rental real estate into a single activity. And then if all your work is on the rental real estate, you're going to meet more of that 500 hours, because by definition, if you hit 750 hours, you hit 500 hours. So you do have to meet both tests. And that's actually a, that's a pretty big
Starting point is 00:29:40 distinction that people forget that if you don't make that election, or let's say, for example, you're a full-time real estate agent. Well, that's a real estate professional. Does that mean you work 500 hours in your rental properties? Nope. You still have to work 500 hours in your rental properties. So you still have to meet the general rule, even though you met the specific rule for real estate professional. Now, I want to make sure I understand this concept. So I'm going to give you an example in layman's terms, and you can correct me if I have it wrong. When we talk about passive losses, what that basically means is I imagine a rental property like its own standalone business. And you can take losses like depreciation and other losses against the income that that one business makes,
Starting point is 00:30:21 meaning the rent that that property generates. But if you have more depreciation than you can actually use, it doesn't help you. Now, when you're talking about being a full-time real estate professional, the lobbying that was done by Donald Trump and others said, hey, if you're taking a loss in this area, you should be able to count. against income that you made in another area because it's more or less all real estate. Do I have that, right? Yeah, that's the general rule. So, and just a couple of fine points on this.
Starting point is 00:30:48 First of all, you don't lose the loss. Just because you're passive doesn't mean you lose the loss. You can only use the loss against passive income, which means you can use it next year the year after. It carries forward forever. Okay. And then once you sell the property, it frees up and you get to use it all. So it's a temporary.
Starting point is 00:31:05 It's just a deferral of the loss, basically. It's just postponing the loss. So that's the first thing to remember. You're not losing the deduction. You're just getting it later in the time. What we want to do, of course, though, everybody who's in real estate knows that it's all about having capital and employing that capital. So the less tax we pay, the more capital we have and the more capital we can deploy,
Starting point is 00:31:25 and the more debt we can get, it's a wonderful, vicious cycle. Because we actually buy more real estate, we pay less tax. We buy more real estate, we pay less tax. And literally, you can actually triple your benefit in a single year. just because you know you're going to take all that tax money, redeploy it. So you just have more money and you have more access to debt. Now, I want to slow you down for one second to have you unpack something because the minute that you say taking on more debt means you have less risk. The Dave Ramsey folks, bells are exploding in their head.
Starting point is 00:31:58 Whistles are going off. Sirens are alarming and they're like, heretic, okay? Can you take a minute to explain how debt is actually reducing your own risk? Yeah, let me kind of walk you through. So I love walking through financial statements. If you've read Rich Dad, Poor Dad, Robert's book, you know the whole book is full of financial statements. It's really a book on accounting. And if you look at, you have income expense, assets, and liabilities.
Starting point is 00:32:24 So the first question is, what's the purpose of each of these? So if you have income, what's the purpose of the income? Well, the purpose of the income is to great cash flow, right? So if you have somebody owe you money, that doesn't do you any good until they pay you. So the purpose of income is to create cash flow. What's the purpose of an expense? Well, the purpose of an expense is actually to increase your income. If you're in a business and you're spending money and it's not creating an income,
Starting point is 00:32:47 you should stop spending the money. It's that simple, right? Right. An asset, what's the purpose of an asset? Two purposes. One is it's either to create income or reduce an expense. That's what an asset does. What's the purpose of liability?
Starting point is 00:33:02 A purpose of liability is to buy an asset. So here's what I would say to everyone. who has that when it comes to debt. If you're afraid of debt, it's not really the debt that you're afraid of. It's the asset. If you're secure and the asset is going to produce income, why wouldn't you want to take on the debt? It's really a function of the asset, not the debt.
Starting point is 00:33:24 When we're afraid of debt, what we're actually afraid of is the asset not covering the debt service. That's correct. We're afraid that the asset won't actually produce the income we think it's going to produce. I would go a step further. why are you willing to risk your money and not the bank's money? So that was a point you made when you said that banks putting in $4, you're putting in one versus if you put in all five of your own money.
Starting point is 00:33:45 That's a 80% reduction of your own risk because you're not putting your capital into this investment. You're putting money in from somebody else. Right. Now, obviously, if it's a recourse liability, so you're on the hook for it, you're going, okay, well, eventually I'm going to be on the hook for that. But here's the reality. Do you cover your capital first?
Starting point is 00:34:03 Do you cover the debt first? you cover your debt first. So as long as your rent can cover your debt, yeah, you're not making the income on your capital, but you're still covering the debt payments. You're covering the debt service. But it really is a function of do you trust the asset. And that's why education like Bearer Pockets is so important because the more education we get, the more comfortable we get with the asset, and the more comfortable we are with the asset, then we can leverage that asset and we can actually go after the bank's money and not just risk ours. And that's why we say that not all debt is good debt or bad debt. When we talk about good debt, what we're generally referring to
Starting point is 00:34:38 is buying something, an asset with that money that will produce income to pay back your debt service and hopefully some extra and hopefully we'll appreciate. Bad debt is using that money to buy something that will not pay you back. That's the motorcycle, the RV, the home that doesn't generate income, the timeshare, whatever it is that you're spending that money on. It's not an asset in the sense that it's not actually creating income. It is an asset on a balance sheet, as in it has value and it can be sold. But according to Robert's definition of like what's an asset, is it something that pays you to own it?
Starting point is 00:35:09 Is that accurate? Absolutely. And so if you want more assets, the easiest way to do that is to borrow, but you only want to do that if the asset actually does put money in your pocket. There we go. And that's why people that are becoming financially educated, listening to something like this shouldn't be afraid of the word debt.
Starting point is 00:35:25 People who are not who are just out there like, let me just buy something and see what happens. Those are the ones that need to be listening to Dave Ramsey very, very seriously and not taking on some of that. Okay, so what about the seven-day rule? So real estate professional, remember, it applies to real estate rental. We only care about it when it comes to real estate rental. If you have a property that rents for seven days or less, it's not under the tax law definition. It's not a rental. It's a business. You don't have the real estate rental issue. You don't have to be a real estate professional. Now, it's still real estate. Don't get me
Starting point is 00:35:57 wrong. And so you can become a real estate professional for purposes of your rental property. with your short-term rentals, but the short-term rental itself is not subject to the real estate rental rules. Because it's by definition, not rental. It's just a business. What that means is, is that now it's the 500-hour test. It's not the center of 50-hour test. And you're just looking at, okay, do I materially participate in my short-term rental or not? Well, you have to do that in your long-term rental too. Now, one thing we can't do, you can't aggregate. In other words, you can't combine your short-term rentals with your long-term rentals because, again, short-term rentals are not rentals for tax purposes, long-term rentals are. So we can't combine unlike properties
Starting point is 00:36:37 or unlike businesses. So the great thing about the short-term rounds, and a lot of people do this and they're total professionals at. I've stayed in Airbnbs. I'm sure you have to. And there's some great properties out there and they do a great service. And guess what? They just have to meet the regular rules. They don't have to meet the real estate professional rules. They still get the appreciation, but they don't have to worry about the passive loss rules as long as they're active in their business. I'm curious. I never asked this earlier. What if you use a property manager to manage your rental, does that actually hurt you from making that 500-hour rule? Sure, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:37:10 It will certainly reduce the number of hours you have. So it's very important that if you're going to take the real estate professional, if you're going to go down that route, which is not the only route to using the losses right now, but it is the easiest route, then what you have to make sure of is that combined of all of your rental properties, you're going to have to work 500 hours realistically in those properties that you have on a combined basis. Okay. Thank you. Let's talk about how we generate losses, shall we, in real estate? Yeah. This is what I call in Chapter 7 of Tax Free Wealth, I call the Magic of Depreciation. So I met Robert back in 2001, and the first time I put me on stage, I was at one of his three-day events, and it was November of
Starting point is 00:37:54 2003. I remember very clearly. We didn't know each other very well. We just kind of gotten to know each other a little bit. And he pulled me up on stage. I mean, that is one brave guy, Robert, because he had no idea if I even knew how to speak English. And he pulls me up on stage, he says, so tell us about depreciation. I said, well, it's magic. He looks at me. He goes, what? I said, well, here's what it is. You get a deduction for an asset that's going up in value. You get a deduction for an asset that's going up in value. You get a deduction for an asset that's going up in value. where else do you get that? You get a deduction for oil and gas. The minute you drill, it's going down in value because you're depleting that asset, right? You know, you spend money on your business. That expense is gone, right? Now, hopefully it's going to create income,
Starting point is 00:38:40 but that expense is gone. So this is the one place, real estate is really the one place where you get this deduction for an appreciating asset. So it's pretty cool. But here's what makes it even better. So a lot of people have heard that we have what's called bonus depreciation. Bonus depreciation means that rather than taking it over the whole, let's say, useful life of the building, we actually get to take it faster than that. And, you know, certainly there are some things when we buy a property. Think about this. When you buy a property, typically you're buying four things. You're buying the land. You're buying the building. You're buying the land improvements, which includes all of the sidewalks, the driveway, the,
Starting point is 00:39:20 landscaping, all that kind of stuff. And you're buying the contents of the building, like the window coverings and the floor coverings and all that kind of stuff, cabinets, et cetera. Okay, so we all know that carpets wear out faster than buildings, right? Landscaping actually wears out, okay? It wears out faster for some of us who are brown thumbs than others who are green thumbs, but it wears out.
Starting point is 00:39:42 And so what we do is we appreciate those at a faster rate. So we're a building, for example, a residential property, we might depreciate the building over 27 and a half years, which is about three and a half percent a year, depreciating the carpet will probably depreciate it 20 percent a year. Yes. Except when it comes to bonus depreciation, which we have this year and for the next couple of years in a decreasing amount, the land improvements and the contents, which typically amount to 20 to 30 percent of your purchase price if you do a cost segregation, those are deductible
Starting point is 00:40:17 the year you buy the property and put it in the service. So you might have, say, a million dollar building, you buy a million dollar building and you might get a $200, $300,000 deduction in year one on that million dollar building. Okay, let's break this down to make sure that I understand it. When you talk about depreciation is magic and real estate, there's a few things I want to highlight for our listeners that are inexperienced with the tax code. When you hear depreciation, that does not mean the value of the asset going down. It's not the opposite of appreciation, which is what it sounds like.
Starting point is 00:40:48 It's an accounting term that is used to describe the fact that when you buy something, an asset for your business, it will fall apart over time. So if you understand that owning real estate is owning a business, you can compare it to a different business. So let's say you have a company that, a landscaping company that cuts grass, where you're going to have to buy a truck to drive all your stuff around. You need that as an expense to create income because like you said earlier, Tom, that's the purpose of an expense.
Starting point is 00:41:13 That truck, the minute you start using it depreciates in value, or maybe not in value, but it falls apart. The tires start to get worn out. It needs to have the oil change. The windshield wipers are going to go bad. The truck gets worn down. And we all understand that if you're in a restaurant, you buy a dishwasher, it's not going to last forever. So they let you take off of your income, this concept of depreciation to pay you back for the fact that when you buy these assets to run your business, they fall apart. Now, the reason it's magic in real estate is because even though the buildings are falling apart and the stuff inside them is falling apart. The value of the thing is going up. Real estate goes up over time. Trucks typically don't. I mean, during the last couple years
Starting point is 00:41:56 of supply chain issues, we've seen that's a little different. But in general, nobody's paying more for a dishwasher that's 30 years old and they're going to pay for the one that's right now. This accounting concept of depreciation is fair. The business owner should be compensated for the fact that the things are buying or falling apart. It just so happens to work in our favor in a massive way when you're buying real estate because the value of the asset is going up. Now, ideally, they would have let us just write off the full value of the property in year once. If you buy it $400,000 house, you're covered for $400,000 of income.
Starting point is 00:42:28 But they realize, yeah, that's not really, no one would ever pay a tax. So instead, like you mentioned, they write it off over 27.5 years for residential. I believe it's 38 years for commercial property, if I'm not mistaken. And you get that 3.5% every year. So if you buy a property, do you have a number in mind, like $400,000? house would probably get you around, but like 12,000 a year or something, am I off there? Well, so remember you also, we're buying land also. Okay, that's a good point. Land does not wear out. Even the IRS knows that. So you don't get a deduction for the land.
Starting point is 00:42:59 And land somewhere typically is going to be anywhere from 10% to 40% of the value. So if you buy a $500,000 property, for example, you may have $400,000 that is not land. So $100,000 land and then the $400,000 that's not land. go. Good point. So then that's what's depreciated over 27 and a half years. And whatever that number is, you can write off against the income that that actual property or business made. Fair? Correct. Okay. And what you're explaining in this concept is that with certain things like carpet, like plumbing, the infrastructure of the home, the cabinets, they're not going to last for a full 27 and a half years. So the tax code allows you to accelerate how quickly you take the depreciation on those specific
Starting point is 00:43:46 assets, right? Correct. And the normal rule is somewhere between five to seven years for those and about 15 years for the land improvements. The true magic comes from the 2017 tax cuts and jobs act, what we like to call the Trump Tax Act, where we now get those two items, land improvements and the content. We get to deduct 100% the first year. We don't have to wait five years, seven years, 15 years to take the deduction. We can take it all in the first year. Wonderful. Okay. And that is typically done through cost segregation studies. Is that right? Right. So that means you hire an engineer and account and they go out. They actually do a study on what are the different cost elements of the property. And that does cost money. So this isn't free,
Starting point is 00:44:34 right? Like I think I paid for two. Oh, of course. I mean, you have to pay for the services. Yeah, it was like six grand per property. And then I had a big one that I did. That one was much more expensive. So it typically isn't something you want to do if it's a really small property and it would be a very small tax benefit. So, you know, again, what I would suggest always though, David, is you run the numbers. So I've seen cost aggregations for small properties be as little as $2,000 and say $15,000. And that's on a less than $200,000 property. Right. So it also depends on what you're going to do with the money. So if you can deploy that tax savings, you can use the tax savings. You're either real estate professional or you have other techniques like we use.
Starting point is 00:45:13 to use that tax loss against other income, and you can take that tax money you would have sent to the government and combine that with debt and buy more property. That's the magic form. Then that's the magic. Okay. What are some of the drawbacks of using accelerated depreciation? So I hear a lot of people talk about drawbacks. I don't think there are drawbacks.
Starting point is 00:45:35 Okay. And here's why, because people say, well, what about recapture? Let's talk briefly about this concept of recapture, which is a hugely major thing. this construed concept. So basically what happens is, is that when you sell an asset, like real estate, the amount of gain or loss that you recognize for tax purposes is the difference between your basis and your sales price. Well, your basis is your original cost, less depreciation. So effectively, when you sell it, you're bringing that depreciation back into income. Okay. Now, here's where the misconception happens. People go, well, wait a minute, if I got a 40% deduction today and three years from
Starting point is 00:46:20 now, I have to pick up 40% in income, is it really worth the three years? Well, for those of us who are heavy real estate investors, yes, okay? But let's say you're not. Is it still worth it? Well, here's why it is, because you're going to save money at that 40%, but you're going to pay tax at the most at 25%. So there's a differential. We call that a conversion. We call that a conversion. So we're actually converting ordinary income to capital gain income. And so even though, yes, there is technically recapture, really the highest it should be is 25%. Now, the part that's the contents of the building, if you sell it within five years, you're
Starting point is 00:47:00 going to have some actual 40% recapture. But we don't look at, I mean, I don't look at three-year deals, right? I'm typically looking at five years or more. And so the question is, A, do I need the capital? can I deploy the capital? And B, if I can't deploy the capital immediately, do I have a rate differential in that capital gain versus ordinary income? Now, what about the fact that if you normally were going to get depreciation over 27 and a half years and you took a lot of it up front? That would mean that the period of time you can take that depreciation is shortened. Right. It could be shortened
Starting point is 00:47:34 in one year. And what that means is that it creates a positive addiction. So it means that we actually literally have to become addicted to buying more property and building more wealth. So I call it a positive addiction because I think an addiction of building more wealth is not such a bad idea. That's a great point. So that's what I wanted to highlight is because you're taking it in year one or maybe in the first couple of years, you have to buy more real estate in order to be able to offset the additional income, which forces you to make prudent decisions, to save your money,
Starting point is 00:48:05 to invest it in something to delay gratification, not to say, ah, I just made a bunch of money. I'm going to go be frivolous and spend it everywhere. If you want to save in taxes, you have to be disciplined and prudent. And that's why I believe you're calling it a, what was the word you used for it? Healthy. A positive addiction. Positive addiction, right. Correct.
Starting point is 00:48:22 Okay. I think I have another question I was asking you. One of the main questions we get here on Bigger Pockets, this is probably very similar to you with your CPA firm is, should I start an LLC to buy a property or should I buy it in my own name? And it's very hard to get people to take any form of action until they get the answer. Can we try to lay that to rest once and for all now? What is the difference between owning an LLC? Why would you want to do it and when would you not?
Starting point is 00:48:47 Okay. So first of all, let me tell you what there's something that's not a difference and that is your tax treatment. Okay. Whether the property is an LLC or whether it's in your own name, you get the same tax treatment. This is a big issue that I hear because I'll actually hear advisors say, well, you need to be in a corporation.
Starting point is 00:49:05 First of all, please don't ever put rental real estate into a corporation. That's a no-no. Every good real estate tax professional like myself knows that you don't do that. There's lots of bad things that can happen and nothing good happens. So instead, what we do is do we use an LLC? Maybe. The reason for an LLC is simply asset protection. Now, here's what we might call the fallacy of the LLC,
Starting point is 00:49:29 and that is that if you have an LLC, nobody's ever going to sue you. Yeah, that's not true, right? Or if you have an LLC, they can never get your assets. Also not true. Here's the way I look at, David. If you and I go out camping in the woods and we come across a mama bear and she starts chasing us, do I need to outrun the bear or do I need to outrun you? Right.
Starting point is 00:49:56 Right? I need to outrun you. And that's the idea of the LLC. The LLC is you're going to outrun your neighbor who doesn't have an LLC. So is it better than not having an LLC? Absolutely. Do we always do it? Pretty much. Pretty much always do it. There are some states where it's a little more challenging, like Tennessee, but we pretty much always want to have some kind of either an LLC or a limited partnership that we use for our real estate because we do want to protect our assets and we want to make it more difficult. It's like putting a lock on your door. Will it keep the thief out of your house? No, but will it make it harder for them to get in? Might they go to the house next to you? Doesn't have their door locked? Yes. And that's kind of the idea. We're just trying to reduce the liability. The reality is, is that let's say you buy the house and a month later,
Starting point is 00:50:42 you put it into an LLC. Well, what that means is that you have that risk for one month. That's it. After that, you don't have the risk. So my understanding of LLC's was this idea, and I think most people probably share it, that it's a corporation that if you put something in there and you get sued and lose, they can only take what is inside of that LLC and they can't get after any of your personal assets. And therefore, an LLC is way safer and the tradeoff is the convenience. It's kind of a pain to get financing. Can you clear up some of the fallacies behind the fact that they can't get into anything
Starting point is 00:51:17 that's outside of the LLC as well as what an LLC even really is? Yeah. First of all, it's not a corporation. It is a limited liability company. And it's actually more like a limited partnership than it is like a corporation. The only difference between, really the only difference between an LLC, and a limited partnership is that you don't have to have a general partner. It's really like a limited partnership where everybody's a limited partner, right?
Starting point is 00:51:43 And so that's really what it's like. The real key to the LLC is that it's not that they can't get the asset. I mean, let's say you have a tenant that slips and falls. Are they going to still be able to get the asset in there? Yes. Is it harder for them to get through that LLC and get your personal assets? Yeah, it is. If you treat it right, if you set it upright, particularly if you're,
Starting point is 00:52:06 if you have multiple owners, it's going to be way more difficult to get to your personal assets. But let me tell you, the other thing, I've got clients, been through lawsuits, I've been through lawsuits. The attorneys are always going to sue you, too. So they're not just going to sue the LLC. They're going to sue you, too. So will it help you? No question. I think LLCs are extraordinarily valuable.
Starting point is 00:52:27 Is it impenetrable? No. Do you have to absolutely maintain every single detailed and do it right all the time? Yes. Okay. So they're a bit of a trap sometimes because people think, oh, well, if I have an LLC, I just have to have the LLC and then I'm done. No, you have to maintain books and records. You have to have annual meeting minutes. You have to file the tax return. You have to do all those things. So there are expenses to the LLC and there are requirements of the LLC. And if you don't follow those, the judge is just going to look at that and say, well, and so will the IRS, by the way. They'll look at it and they'll say, well, you didn't respect the form of the LLLLC. LLC, so I'm not going to. You know, I want to get your perspective on this thought that I've often had. From a practical standpoint, it seems like if you had six paid off properties in an LLC
Starting point is 00:53:17 and they were worth $2 million, that would be way riskier from the perspective of being sued than if you had six properties in there and you had leverage on 80% of it and there was way less actual equity in the deal. Yeah, for sure. I mean, that's the other thing that gives you. You know, you talk about risk. You know, now instead of having $2 million in that LLC, you have 20%, you have 400,000 in that LLC.
Starting point is 00:53:45 The other thing you can do, of course, is you can form multiple LLCs, you can have holding company structures, all of these things. When we do a tax strategy with a client, we look at all of that. We set it all up. That's wonderful. Yeah, that's another area where I had several paid off properties. And I'm a victim of fraud where people are basically stealing them. they've taken title from those properties through fraudulent activity through a title company,
Starting point is 00:54:09 and they were paid off. Had they not been paid off if there was a ton of equity, the person would not have been able to get them and then try to sell them to someone else. And so it's just another thing you don't hear when you hear people say, the path to freedom is to pay off all your dead and own it free and clear and you're good to go. I was literally this big fat target sitting there with these paid off properties that drew somebody in. Yeah, for sure. I mean, let's take an Airbnb be our short-term rental. You've got 150 people going through your house every year, 150 potential lawsuits going through your house every year. So if you own that free and clear, that's all at risk. That's a great point. Now, one of the ways that you can reduce that risk is
Starting point is 00:54:48 instead of just thinking of an LLC is actually taking out insurance in your name on the property. Is that sort of a more prudent decision if you're going to hold it in your own name? If I had to choose between insurance, typically an umbrella policy, if I had to choose between insurance and LLC, I would choose insurance. Now, fortunately, we don't have to choose. We can do both. Right. But the reason insurance is so important, actually, we think of it, oh, well, if I get sued, then the insurance will pay off. Maybe. What's the most important thing is that the insurance company will use their attorney and they will take care of it. There you go.
Starting point is 00:55:20 And I actually think, I've had that situation. I had a rental property up in Utah and the renter lost their job and next thing I know they're saying that they slipped and fell, right? So maybe a coincidence. I don't know. But what happened was property manager contacted the insurance company. Actually, I heard I spent five minutes on the phone with the insurance adjuster, and that's the last I heard of it. They handled everything. You know, my mother taught all of us a long time ago. She said, the two most important people in your life are a good CPA and a good insurance agent. That's some good education you had. I've always looked at it like having a big brother on your side.
Starting point is 00:55:59 Their attorneys know what they're doing. They're paid to save that company money. You've now aligned yourself with this big, powerful expert in that field. It's very similar to when you're buying commercial property and you're getting a loan from a bank. Their underwriters are looking at that deal because they're putting 80% of the money and they're more exposed than you are. It's another set of eyes that is an expert in doing that that can kind of verify what
Starting point is 00:56:22 you're doing. And that's one of the reasons why you just want to have the right people on your team when you're buying real estate. It's not about learning it yourself. 100% agree. When I bought my first rental, I thought collecting rent would be the hard part. Nope. The admin crushed me. Every night was receipts, tax forms, and checking who was late on rent. I kept thinking, if this is one unit, how do people run 10?
Starting point is 00:56:41 Baselane changed that. It's BiggerPockets official banking platform that handles expense tracking, financial reporting, rent collection, and even tenant screening all in one place. It's the system I wish I had from day one. Sign up today at baselane.com slash bigger pockets and get a $100 bonus. Base lane is a financial technology company and is not an FDIC insured bank. Bank banking services provided by Threadbank, member FDIC. Most investors spend more time chasing deals than reviewing their insurance.
Starting point is 00:57:04 But a quick coverage check can be fast, easy, and one of these smartest ways to protect and even improve your property's cash flow. As the months get colder, frozen pipes, icy walkways, and seasonal wear and tear can increase the likelihood of claims. And traditional insurance companies aren't always built to handle these claims quickly or smoothly. That's why more real estate investors are turning to steadily. They focus exclusively on landlords, whether it's a single-family rental, a burr-builders risk policy, or midterm holiday guests. You get fast quotes, flexible coverage, and protection for property damage, liability,
Starting point is 00:57:39 and even loss of rental income. Now is the perfect time to review your rates and coverage. Get a quote in minutes at biggerpockets.com slash landlord insurance. Steadily, landlord insurance designed for the modern investor. New Year, Clean Slate, and make Maybe a vacancy that needs to get filled fast? That's where a veil comes in. With Avail, rental listings can be published to 24 top rental sites with one click, completely free. That includes places renters are already searching, like Realtor.com, apartments.com, Redfin, and more.
Starting point is 00:58:08 No copying and pasting. No juggling multiple platforms, just one listing that shows up everywhere. If getting rentals organized and filled fast is on the list this year, start with Avail. Sign up for free at Avail.co. slash bigger pockets. That's AVAIL.com slash bigger pockets. Tax season reminder for all the real estate investors listening. If you own rental properties, short-term rentals, commercial buildings, basically anything that's not your primary residence, you need to know about cost segregation. It's an IRS compliance strategy that lets you accelerate
Starting point is 00:58:41 depreciation on your properties, which means you're paying less in taxes this year and keeping more cash in your pocket for your next deal. Cost segregation, Guys is the go-to firm, having done over 12,000 of these studies with 500 million in total depreciation identified. Head to Costsegregationguise.com slash BP to get a free proposal and see your potential tax savings. So tell me about the system that you've created. How does one go about starting out on the right foot when they want to get into sort of an investing system that can be repeated? So here's what I've learned over the years. And I've got, I've had a lot of clients that are very successful real estate investors. That's really been my specialty for 40 years. And a lot of developers,
Starting point is 00:59:24 a lot of investors. And here's what I found is that there's something in common with all of them. And that is that they do all have a system and they have a set of criteria they use. So we call it the three-minute investment decision. So for example, what kind of a cap rate are you looking at? What location are you looking at? What size of property are you looking at? What kind of a loan are you looking at? All of these are criteria for investing. And what happens, is two things you're going to happen. The first of all is you only have to make one decision. You're just going to apply that decision multiple times. So the professional investor makes a single decision applies it over and over and over again. The amateur investor makes a new decision
Starting point is 01:00:03 on every single property. Okay. So to me, that's the key because I don't have a lot of time. I have four different businesses besides all the investments. And so I want to make sure that I'm not looking at a property unless it meets my criteria, right? And so I'll take, for example, Ken McElroy, he's a big real-same investor. A lot of people know Ken, a good friend of mine. We've taught all over the world together. And I've listened to Ken on stage after stage after stage. In Moscow, I've listened to him in Australia. I've listened literally New Zealand everywhere. And what I found was is he always does the same thing. He's in a certain type of market in a certain type of property with a certain type of tenant, right,
Starting point is 01:00:49 and a certain cap rate, et cetera. He's looking for the same thing. And so what it does is it makes the investment decision much less risky and it makes it much easier. The other thing that's pretty interesting, though, is actually it actually gets you a lot more opportunities. And if I can, I'll just share why I say this. And it's what I call the Blue Hunter rule.
Starting point is 01:01:10 It's like, you decide you're going to buy a car and you do all your research to go out I want reliability and I want to resale value, et cetera, et cetera. And I want it to be blue. Okay. So you go into the Honda dealer and they say, great, we've got that coming in in three weeks. So what car do you see on the road for the next three weeks? Blue Honda, right? That's how our brains work.
Starting point is 01:01:32 Consider, let's say you've got those same criteria for investing. You've got the same criteria. What kind of investments do you see? Those are the ones you see. That's a great point. And a lot of other people will pass them by because they never see them, but you'll see them. And so I think it's just, it brings you, you know, deal flow is a big issue for a lot of investors. And you want deal flow, you need to set your criteria and really have a system for investing.
Starting point is 01:01:57 But the good news is, not only is there, can you create a system for investing, you can also create a system for reducing your taxes. So you make sure that every single thing you do reduces your taxes as long as you follow the system for reducing taxes. We call that the crystal clear criteria. here at Bigger Pockets that you have to be very clear. An idea popped in my head as you were speaking about. So my real estate team spends a lot of time helping people with what we call house hacking. So that's where we buy a house as a primary residence. We rent out a part of the home to someone else to reduce, eliminate,
Starting point is 01:02:28 or even give you positive cash flow at some point. One of the trickiest things to accomplish in the Bay Area is to find a floor plan that will work for that because like a track house is very hard to do that with. And then have enough parking. Like no one ever thinks about the fact that there needs to be enough parking. I've noticed that whenever a deal crosses my path, if it has parking, immediately, I start to pay attention to that thing. I've been programmed to look for that because to me, that's very valuable. And then when I see it, I know exactly what I'm looking for. What's the
Starting point is 01:02:56 floor plan? How many bathrooms does it have? If those three things are there, I'm digging into it deeper. So that is absolutely true. That's what I love about when you know what you're looking for. You make these decisions in three minutes and they're not risky or they're not any more risky than they would have been the first time you did it. They're way less risky because, again, you trust your asset because you've made that decision multiple times and it's worked for you. And so now you can trust that asset. And now you can think about bringing on debt because guess what? You know, it's going to work. Yes. You know, I'm just starting to think about like professional athletes when they're new in the NBA or the NFL. That player doesn't really know
Starting point is 01:03:33 what shot he can get in the NBA when he's new. He's trying to figure out how is his game going to work. that quarterback isn't quite sure if that pass will work or not. And then doing it enough times, they get really clear on recognizing that's open or that's not. This is good for me. And then what you see is confidence and quick decisions can be made. Like it's such a great point that you're highlighting that this is what successful people do is they start broad. They narrow down and then they just look for that thing and they do the same thing over and over and over until it's boring but awesome. That's right.
Starting point is 01:04:03 Okay. Was there anything else that you think that we should cover as far as misconceptions, on the tax code or things that people can do to save money on their taxes through real estate. Yeah, one more thing. So people focus all the time in this real estate professional. And people go, well, I can't be a real estate professional. Let me give an example. My wife and I. My wife and I are never going to be real estate professionals. My wife has her own CPA firm. I have not only a CPA firm. I also have a network of 60 CPA firms that I train. In fact, I'm in middle of a training program right now.
Starting point is 01:04:36 I have a software company and I have a real estate business. I'm not going to spend more time in real estate than I do everything else. And my wife isn't either. She loves that. So how do we get to use those losses? Here's the key. You got to go back to this idea that passive losses, just because passive doesn't mean it's not deductible. Passive loss means it's not deductible except against passive income.
Starting point is 01:05:03 So the goal with the real estate professional is turn a passive loss into an active loss. The other side of that is if you could turn active income into passive income, you could accomplish exactly the same result. Okay. Well, what makes something active versus passive? It's the owner spends 500 hours in that business. Well, what if you have owners that don't spend 500 hours? For example, the trust for your three-year-old.
Starting point is 01:05:35 Three-year-old's not going to spend 500 hours. You're not going to be the trustee because if you are, you're not as protected with that trust. So you have nobody who's active. If the three-year-old owns part of your business and owns part of your real estate, now they have passive income from your business. It's active to you, passive to them,
Starting point is 01:05:55 and they have passive losses from the real estate. So we can match these up. we can create, literally create passive income simply by converting active income to passive income. And we can still maintain control over it. We can still have what we want with it. I mean, the most important thing that any asset protection attorney will tell you, and I'm not an attorney, but I have several buddies who are, they'll say, look, the important thing about asset protection is you want to control everything and own nothing.
Starting point is 01:06:24 Okay. Well, listen, if I can control that asset, why do I care? I mean, it's eventually going to go to my kids anyway. Why not have them have it now and reduce my tax liability? So if I hear what you're saying correctly, one thing you have to be careful of is you put enough hours into something like real estate rentals. But another way to accomplish the same purpose would be to spend less hours on what used to be active income.
Starting point is 01:06:49 Sure. I'll give you a simple example. I started a brand new CPA firm a couple of years ago. The first year, I was active. second year I was active third year not active I spend far less than 500 hours in my CPA firm well guess what that's passive income which means you can use depreciation for rental properties which means I can use appreciation from my rental properties you know what's beautiful about this is that actually creates another positive addiction where you have to leverage yourself out of active income right so every time
Starting point is 01:07:21 you start a new business it's a race to how quickly can I get other people running the business for me enjoying the fruits of it, making more money so I can get out of it because then I get the tax benefit. Well, even better is. So in the early years, when you're active, that business is creating a loss. Right. Probably. As soon as it starts turning income, now you become passive because you've got the team in place and the systems in place. You become passive. And now you can offset that income with passive losses from your real estate. Beautiful. Okay. This is awesome. I'm really glad you brought that up. I don't think I ever was told that before, which is why I'm glad we have the man himself to explain this. In this next segment of the show, Tom is actually going to
Starting point is 01:08:07 break down my personal situation with some of the ways that I have income coming in and businesses I own and give me some advice on what I could do to limit my own tax liability. So this is a little bit of like a consultation that we're going to be having as I come to you that we're doing in front of everyone here. So what questions do you need to start with to be able to. to get the information you need to help me. Yeah. So the first thing I need to know is what you own. Okay.
Starting point is 01:08:32 What do you have now? I need two things. I want to know what do you have right now and what are your plans for the future? So in other words, what do you want to have? Because all taxes are based on your current facts and circumstances. We always say if you want to change your tax, you have to change your facts. So I need to understand not only what you have now, but I understand how, you understand how are you investing for the future and what are your plans for the future? Because how you make your money,
Starting point is 01:09:02 just like I showed in Cashflow quadrant right at the beginning, how you make your money as an enormous impact on how much tax you pay. And that includes what asset classes, what types of assets, what type of real estate, whatever it is, what type of business. So we need to understand what you have now and what your plans are for the future. Very good. Okay. So this is actually a great time to bring this up. I haven't really made it public yet, but one of my huge goals for 2022 is to raise money to buy more real estate with. So I have a website set up, invest with Davidgreen.com where people can go if they want to invest with me. And we have a system set up where we look to see if they're accredited investor or not. And then my plans are to buy some very expensive
Starting point is 01:09:44 residential real estate and likely use it as a short-term rental or possible like corporate housing situations, as well as multifamily real estate. Those are the two things that I'm going to start off focusing on in the areas that I think like the population is moving towards where we're expected to see both rent growth and price growth. I have a couple corporations set up where I run a real estate sales team, a mortgage company. There's an insurance company that will be coming soon. A couple other ways that I create revenue. And then I have money coming in that is currently in my personal name that I'm probably going to be changing where I have book royalties from stuff with bigger pockets and other ways that I get paid like speaking at different events, stuff like that.
Starting point is 01:10:29 Okay. So what I need to know now, now I have to start drilling down a little bit, right? So when you say I have corporations, explain that. You have C corporations, S corporations, LLC's taxes partnerships. I have a C corporation. I have an S corporation. And then I have probably six or seven LLCs where I own somewhere between 45 and 50 residential properties between them. And those are taxed as partnerships. Yes. Okay. And this is a point I'd like to make here is that LLCs can be taxed any way we want.
Starting point is 01:11:03 So we can choose to tax an LLC as a corporation. We can choose tax an LLC as a partnership. We can actually choose taxing LLC as sole proprietorship. So we have all these choices. So that's why I'm always going to go back to, is it a partnership for tax purposes? Is it an S corporation C corporation? Partnerships and S corporations, that income flows through. So the income from an S corporation theoretically can be offset with the losses from a partnership,
Starting point is 01:11:33 okay, because those both flow through to your personal tax return. So what we want to look at is, first question I'm going to ask you is, and we've had this discussion, so do you qualify as a real estate professional? My understanding, yes. Okay. So we've got that. So what we're going to do is we're going to make sure we make an election to aggregate all your properties.
Starting point is 01:11:52 We're going to do that on your tax return. So you're going to be able to use those losses. Do you spend more than 500 hours when you take all your properties together? Do you spend more than 500 hours? Absolutely. Okay. So we're good there. We've met that passive loss rule, that passive loss test.
Starting point is 01:12:07 So now active losses, active income. So now what we have is we have the losses from the real estate can offset the from the S corporation. What it can't do is offset the income from the C corporation. So tell me about the C corporation. That's where the majority of the money that I make, I would say that's the biggest bucket. And I use that money. I lend it to other companies to earn additional income. So I would lend myself money from that to flip houses, to buy assets in the other corporations, make investments like that. And then there's the corporate tax rate that I'm paying on that. But I also can pay myself a salary from that C corporation, that would be offset by the deductions that we talked about,
Starting point is 01:12:50 just like the escort. So we should probably talk about that for a minute. So we have a new rule beginning of 2021. And the new rule is called the business loss limitation rule. And what it says is that business losses, including real estate losses, can only offset business income plus an additional $500,000. So as long as that salary is not more than $500,000 and you don't have interest income, dividends, retirement, et cetera, that would push you over that $500,000.
Starting point is 01:13:24 You are absolutely correct. You can offset all of that. Once you get over that $500,000, though, you're not going to be able to use those losses anymore and that will just carry over. So we have to be able to careful with that, and that's brand new, brand new in 2021. Would there be a downside to shifting the way that income is taxed for? from a C-Corp into an S-Corp and making that a pass-through. Right. So we may want to do that.
Starting point is 01:13:47 So that is one thing we would want to look at right off the bat is, are you going to invest? So this is where the future matters, right? Are you going to invest so much in real estate that it will offset all of the income from the C-corporation? Because C-corporation, great thing is, 21% tax rate, right? That's the good news about the C-corporation, federal tax rate of 21%. But if we can get below that, because we've got all these losses, from real estate, why would we want to get it stuck at 21%, especially knowing that eventually
Starting point is 01:14:19 that money is going to come out and be taxed as a dividend? So when I made that decision to set up the C-Corp, I was not buying real estate. I had other things going on, and so I could reduce my taxes. Since then, I've started not only buying real estate, but ramping it up significantly. And I've learned more about a lot of what you're talking about, the bonus depreciation, accelerated, depreciation, cost segregation studies. So now what I basically do is I have my CPA tell me, hey, David, you're on track to make X amount of money. You need to buy X amount of real estate.
Starting point is 01:14:49 And that becomes the minimum goal that I'm going to be shooting for. There you go. And that's why another part of the whole system here is that you meet with your CPA on a regular basis. And you're constantly looking at what your income is and what your cash flow is. And do I have cash flow to buy that? And then we also have to know those criteria because we need to know, okay, so how much debt are you going to get? and how are you going to go about getting that debt? Because we all know that, you know, if we go through normal channels, we're limited that way.
Starting point is 01:15:17 So how are we going to increase the amount of debt we can get? And those are all decisions. That's actually all part of what I consider to be wealth and tax strategies. You've got to look at both sides of it. You can't just look at the tax side. I think what I love about what I've heard so far, first off is your approach to this. Like you said, it's not just saving in taxes. That's defense, but you also got to play offense.
Starting point is 01:15:39 It's also how you build wealth and debt is a huge piece of that as well as education, right? We're not saying just go buy anything out there. It's buying the right stuff. But I only have to know enough of these concepts to feel comfortable trusting someone like you who's going to tell me what to go do, right? I don't need to be an expert in all of this. Part of the reason that we're sharing this information is it's good to understand what your CPA is doing so that you know that it's legal and the advice they give you makes sense. But someone like you, like you just said, is going to say, we need to switch this up. we need to change that. And this is what I want you to go out there and buy. And I don't have to
Starting point is 01:16:12 understand the concepts, which is why I wrote tax for wealth, frankly, so everybody could understand the concepts. Because here's the challenge. I can't reduce your taxes. You're the only one who can reduce your taxes. What you need me for us to tell you how to reduce your tax, what you need to do to reduce your taxes, right? What facts do you have to change to reduce that tax? And so it's, it's very much a team effort. It's very much a partnership. That's how we look all of our relationships with our clients to the point where we don't even charge separate fee for a tax return. We charge a basically flat monthly fee to our clients. And that is how we charge because we want to make sure that nobody's hesitating picking
Starting point is 01:16:51 up the phone calling us. Nobody's hesitating with, okay, I need to talk about this. Boy, am I going to get dinged for that 15 minutes like you do with an attorney? Oh, boy, that's exactly how it goes to. You know, I should probably highlight you and I have to understand these concepts because we're responsible for teaching people. but the person listening doesn't have to understand them all. I'd like, if you don't mind, to wrap this up with you sharing your five steps to
Starting point is 01:17:12 eliminate income taxes from real estate deals. I think it's very practical. I think everybody can get started. And it's a great concept to understand if you want to start to take action on some of the stuff we talked about today. So number one is you've got to develop that strategy, right? You've got to develop that plan of action. And typically, we find that's going to take anywhere from three to six months, just
Starting point is 01:17:32 developing the plan. If you've ever played Robert's cash flow game, I would encourage anybody who's played it to try playing it by developing a strategy first before you start playing the game. And what you'll find is you'll make far fewer mistakes. You'll get out of the rat race a lot faster. So you've got to start by developing the plan, but you need a team. So part of developing that plan is who's on your team, who's your tax advisor, who's your legal advisor, who's going to find the real estate for you if you're not going to do it? Who's going to manage the real estate if you're not going to do it? I mean, all of these people are part of that.
Starting point is 01:18:05 Then the second part is really long-term. So remember that you talked a little bit about flipping properties. That's great. That's a business. I want to be really clear. That's not an investment. That's a business. You are actively managing flipping properties.
Starting point is 01:18:19 You're more like a developer than you are like a landlord, right? Because you're not just leasing these out. So I love the long-term rentals, which is what Robert likes, because, A, you get the depreciation, which you don't get when you flip. B, you get lower tax rates because you get capital gains rates when you sell, unlike flipping, which is ordinary income rates. And you've got an asset that's producing cash flow for a very long period of time. So I love that.
Starting point is 01:18:45 Fix and flips are great if that's the business you want to be in. But just trade it more like a business. Understand that you're not in the eye segment of the cash flow quadrant. You're an S. You're an S. You're not an I. Thank you. That's a good way to put it.
Starting point is 01:18:59 Make sure that you're doing cost segregation and bonus depreciation on your properties. That is just critical. I hear a lot of naysayers about cost segregation. Oh, it's too expensive. Seriously, I mean, I've seen cost segregation save people millions of dollars. And there's even some online tools that you can do it for pretty inexpensively cost segregation on a single family home. So there are some tools that you can use that are kind of a quasi-do-it-yourself. The other is, next is, you either need to look at becoming a real estate. professional or your spouse becoming a real estate professional. It doesn't have to be both of you, just one of you. Or we've got to look at the alternatives, which is how do I create passive income?
Starting point is 01:19:44 So I either need to take the passive loss, make it active, or I need to take my active income and make it passive. So that would be number four. And then finally is a part of, really, it's part of number one and it's part number five, which is the team. Investing is a team sport. That's one of the very first things I learned from Robert Kiyosaki is investing is a team sport. And business is a team sport. I mean, I right now, literally, I'm right now teaching a class of 60 tax professionals. Well, my team is, right? The reason I can do this podcast, because I have a team that I trust, and they can do that while I've stepped out to do this podcast and teach you guys. So I just can't emphasize that enough. The Rich Dad Advisors actually wrote a book called More Important Than Money,
Starting point is 01:20:30 and it's all about developing that team. So I definitely recommend that book as well. That's awesome. Now, here's what's even more awesome is people like you and I can help with step five. That's literally what we're here to do is to help people build wealth through real estate so that they don't have to figure it all out themselves. That's where most of the businesses I have were built for that purpose is you're going to need a loan to get property, commercial and residential. You're going to need loans for certain properties that you won't be able to qualify for based on your own income.
Starting point is 01:20:56 You're going to need a representative to help you buy it. You're going to need someone to manage it. You're going to need a way to keep the books of the income coming in, and you're going to need a way to make sure getting a tax deduction there. So, I mean, would you agree we both committed our life to helping people to do this? For sure. The reason we have a network, it's called the Walthability Network, is actually because we had a CPA firm, and we could really only handle the high-end clients, and we couldn't handle the beginners.
Starting point is 01:21:20 Okay, we can't have people just starting out because you can't pay somebody differently. You can't pay a tax professional differently for handling a beginner. than you do on an hourly rate than you do for somebody who makes millions of dollars a year. So what we did was create a network. And now we have 60 CPA firms across the country. And now we can handle people at all stages. And that's really just like you, David, we are here to serve the entrepreneur. And we certainly include real estate investors as a key part of that entrepreneurship group.
Starting point is 01:21:54 Man, it feels good to have Big Brother having your back when it comes to that. So, Tom, for the people that want to reach out, find out more about what you can do to help them or just kind of follow up with you. Where's a good place for them to go? Best way is just go to wealthability.com. It's exactly spelled exactly how it sounds, wealth, ability, all one word, dot com. And just contact us. For example, we'll do a free look at your tax return.
Starting point is 01:22:18 We'll look at say, you know, is there some way we can help? If there isn't, we will tell you. If there is, we will tell you if you have a CPA that you go, boy, my CTA. I love my CPA. They just don't understand this stuff. Have your CPA go to wealthability.com suggest they become a member. Almost all of our members have come from their clients. And that's because entrepreneurs hear what we have to say. Entrepreneurs want to know what their choices are. And they might like their CPA, but their CPA needs to learn this. If alternatively, you go, I hate my CPA, first of all, sorry, you hear that. And second of all, just go to Wealthability.com and we'll help find you a CPA.
Starting point is 01:22:55 There are certain pieces of this puzzle that you rarely ever find a human being that says, I love this person in it. Like property manager is one of them. You just don't hear people say, I love my property manager. CPA is another one of those things. And it's just because it's so hard. There's so many questions. It's a lot of the people who have the most questions are able to pay the least.
Starting point is 01:23:16 And so it's hard to pay a professional to be able to answer those questions if there's not enough revenue coming in. And frankly, most CPAs will just tell you just like most lawyers, yeah, just don't do it. it because that will get them in trouble, right? What you're looking for as a person who says, if you're going to do it, here is the way to do it. And that's invaluable. Yeah, let me give you the question to ask. Instead of asking, is this marker deductible? The better question is, how do I make it deductible? Yes. In life, that is the right way to think. How do I do what I want to do? That's what entrepreneurs want to know. I would also share, I do have the wealthability show, which is my podcast. And David,
Starting point is 01:23:52 I'd love to have you on something. You got it, man. Absolutely. And we, we, We talked to a lot of very interesting people about all aspects of finance and tax. I'd love to do that. I believe it was in rich dad, poor dad, where Robert said, the rich don't ask, can I afford it? They ask, how can I afford it? Is that sound familiar? It does, actually. Robert and Kim had a rule throughout their marriage, which is they never say, you can't buy this.
Starting point is 01:24:18 You just have to say, okay, tell me where the cash flow is coming from. What asset are you buying in order to pay for that expense? Oh, that's such a great point. I miss Brandon Turner, my former co-host because he would come up with these cool names for everything that we talk about. But there's this concept that I live by where I basically have all my income coming in from the different businesses. Then that's all invested into real estate. And then amount is set aside in reserves. And whatever is left over from that cash flow is what I consider the money that I actually make.
Starting point is 01:24:46 I don't even look at the money that businesses make. And if I want to buy anything, like you said, it comes from that. And if you live that way, you never run out of money. You can buy anything you want as long as you invested before, which is why these positive addictions are so important because they keep you buying real estate. They keep you saving and investing your money. What was the other example that we brought up about a positive addiction? Oh, getting out of your business, right?
Starting point is 01:25:11 Like don't just follow the temptation to do all the work yourself because it's easier. Train, hire, delegate, grow, become a leader, create opportunity for others. And then you get it to take advantage of all the. It makes you a better person when you're trying to save in taxes. I think that's what I really like about it. Oh, for sure. You know, and look to your team. I mean, I've had people say, well, I'm going to do my own tax.
Starting point is 01:25:33 I'm going, really, that's how little you value your time. You can't do something that's more productive than learning what it's taking me 40 years to learn. I just think it's crazy. Why when you always hire somebody who knows it better than you do and really can do it for a much better rate than for you to have to go in and learn it all and go do it yourself? I think do it yourself, three most expensive words in the English language. And I've learned that lesson the hard way. I started off just like people.
Starting point is 01:25:58 And now that I'm a real estate agent, I see it too. People say, I'm just to sell the house myself, save the commission. Like, you have no idea. Are you crazy? How much money you're losing, especially in a market like this. And unfortunately, like I want you guys to listen and not make that same mistake. You could do anything yourself. You could do anything yourself.
Starting point is 01:26:14 You could learn how to do surgery. You could do it on yourself. You're in court. You could represent yourself as a lawyer. anything can be learned. It doesn't mean a smart use of your time to do that way. You let the professionals handle the stuff that they're better at handling and then you focus on the vision that you have and executing that. Absolutely. 100% agree. Well, I want to thank you, Tom. This has been fantastic. I really appreciate your time. We've been wanting to get a tax professional on here because this is
Starting point is 01:26:39 one of those things that nobody values it until they need it. And then all of a sudden it's an emergency. I need to talk to someone right now. They've already made the decision and they go to you and they say, How do you fix what I did? How do you bill me out of this instead of like you said, step number one was come up with a plan to work it. Is there anything that you want to say before we get out of here? No, I just wanted to say thank you because I think when you talk about education and how important is if you want to invest money at a really high rate of return, then invest in yourself
Starting point is 01:27:06 and invest in your education. That's what I would say. That's going to be way more productive, frankly, than investing in any singular piece of real estate. Wonderful. Well, thank you very much for your time. your expertise, your knowledge and your heart, Tom. Really appreciate you and we'll all go to your podcast.
Starting point is 01:27:23 I was also on Ken McElroy's. If anyone wants to listen to that, just Google. What was it? Your 9 to 5 just isn't worth it anymore with Ken McElroy and David Green. And we kind of talk about some of the same stuff. That's awesome. Great. Thank you, David.
Starting point is 01:27:35 You got it. Thank you all for listening to the Bigger Pockets Real Estate podcast. Make sure you get all our new episodes by subscribing on YouTube, Apple, Spotify, or any other podcast platform. Our new episodes come out Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. I'm the host and executive producer of the show, Dave Meyer. The show is produced by Ian K. Copywriting is by Calico content.
Starting point is 01:27:55 And editing is by Exodus Media. If you'd like to learn more about real estate investing or to sign up for our free newsletter, please visit www. www. www.com. The content of this podcast is for informational purposes only. All host and participant opinions are their own. Investment in any asset, real estate included, involves risk.
Starting point is 01:28:10 So use your best judgment and consult with qualified advisors before investing. You should only risk capital you can afford to lose. And remember, past performance is not indicative of future results. Bigger Pockets LLC disclaims all. all liability for direct, indirect, consequential, or other damages arising from a reliance on information presented in this podcast.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.