Business Advisory Services
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us
Posted Monday, July 6, 2026
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Rental property bookkeeping and accounting services
You bought a rental property. Maybe two. Maybe twelve. The rents are coming in, the expenses are piling up, and somewhere between the HVAC repair invoice and the Airbnb cleaning fee you realize – wait, who is tracking all of this?
Nobody. The answer is usually nobody.
And that is fine for a while. You dump receipts into a folder, categorize things in your bank’s app, maybe throw some numbers into a spreadsheet your buddy shared. But eventually the portfolio grows, the entities multiply, and tax season rolls around with your CPA staring at a shoebox of receipts asking, “Is this a repair or an improvement?” You do not know. Your bookkeeper does not know. Now you are paying your CPA $300 an hour to sort through your mess instead of doing actual tax planning. Yuck.
At WCG, rental property bookkeeping is not some side gig we bolt onto our tax practice. We do this every day, for clients with one rental and clients with fifty. The bookkeeping feeds directly into tax returns, tax projections, and tax strategy. It is all connected – and when the bookkeeping is clean, everything downstream gets better. Period. Full stop.
Let us walk through what we actually do – not some vague “we handle your books” promise, but the real list. Here we go.
Here is the thing about rental property bookkeeping that most accounting firms underestimate. It is not hard to do the bookkeeping for one rental. It is hard to do the bookkeeping for fifteen rentals across four entities with different acquisition dates, different cost basis, different depreciation schedules, and different ownership percentages.
We handle this in QuickBooks Online using a combination of classes and locations. Each property gets its own class. Each entity gets its own QBO file (or company, depending on complexity). The result is that at any point during the year, we can pull a P&L for a single property, a single entity, or the entire portfolio.
Why does this matter? Let’s say you own four single-family rentals. Three are cash-flowing nicely and one has been eating $400 a month after all expenses. Without property-level reporting, that loss gets buried in the aggregate numbers and you think the portfolio is “doing fine.” It is not. One property is a problem, and the other three are masking it.
We also track capital contributions and distributions at the entity level, which matters for basis calculations on your tax return. If you contributed $25,000 to your LLC to cover a roof replacement, that needs to be reflected properly – not just as a deposit but as a capital contribution that increases your basis. Basis drives your ability to deduct losses. Mess it up and you may have suspended losses sitting on your return that you cannot use. Wonderful.
Sidebar: if you have partners or co-investors in any of your properties, entity-level tracking is not optional. Each partner’s capital account needs to be maintained, and the allocations need to match the operating agreement. We see this go sideways more often than you would think.
Short-term rentals have become a massive growth area in our practice, and for good reason. The economics can be excellent. But the bookkeeping? It is a different animal.
A long-term rental might have 15 to 20 transactions per month. A short-term rental can have 150. You have nightly bookings, cleaning fees, platform service fees, occupancy taxes, damage deposits, guest refunds, supply purchases, and the occasional $47 charge at Bed Bath & Beyond for throw pillows your property manager insists are “essential to the guest experience.”
The transaction volume alone is enough to overwhelm most bookkeepers. But the real complexity is in how the platforms report income. Airbnb and VRBO issue 1099-Ks based on gross booking amounts, which includes cleaning fees, service fees, and taxes that the platform collects and remits on your behalf. If you report that 1099-K as income without backing out the fees and taxes that never hit your bank account, you are overstating your income. Yuck.
We reconcile platform payouts to bank deposits, break out gross bookings versus net payouts, and separately categorize cleaning fees, platform fees, and occupancy taxes. The end result is books that match reality – not just what Airbnb tells the IRS.
Occupancy taxes deserve a special mention. Some jurisdictions require the host to collect and remit occupancy taxes directly. Others have the platform handle it. Some require both. The rules vary by state, county, and sometimes city. We track the liability and make sure it is being remitted on time.
Material participation is the other piece of the short-term rental puzzle. If the average guest stay is seven days or less and you materially participate in the rental activity, the income may not be treated as passive. Huh? That means it could be subject to self-employment tax, but it also means losses could offset your other active income. The bookkeeping needs to support whatever position you take on your tax return, including detailed activity logs if you are claiming material participation.
This is where the bookkeeping stops being a compliance exercise and starts being a strategic tool. Because the numbers we track throughout the year drive the decisions your tax team makes.
We inherit a lot of rental property books from other bookkeepers, DIY setups, and “my property manager tracks everything” situations. Here is what we find most often.
Our process is straightforward. We set up (or clean up) your QBO file with proper class and location tracking for each property. We connect bank and credit card feeds. We categorize transactions monthly using bookkeepers who actually understand rental property accounting – not generalists who think every expense is “miscellaneous.”
Each month, we reconcile accounts, review categorizations, and flag anything that needs your input. We do not disappear for six months and show up at year-end with a pile of questions. We stay current, which means your tax team can run projections mid-year and make real-time decisions about cost segregation studies, estimated payments, and acquisition timing.
Sidebar: we also handle QBO setup for new acquisitions. When you buy property number seven, we add the class, set up the depreciation, and integrate it into your existing reporting structure. Same process, same team, no disruption.
We are not going to list specific prices here because rental property bookkeeping is not one-size-fits-all. A client with two long-term rentals and clean books is a very different engagement than a client with twenty short-term rentals across five entities with occupancy tax obligations in three states.
What we will tell you is how we think about value. The bookkeeping itself is not where the value lives – although clean books are absolutely necessary. The value is in what clean books enable. Tax planning instead of data entry. Accurate depreciation schedules. Clean basis calculations and passive activity tracking. Year-end tax packages that arrive on time.
Having said that, the cost of bookkeeping is almost always less than the cost of not having it. We have seen clients overpay taxes by $5,000 to $15,000 in a single year because their books were wrong – misclassified expenses, missed depreciation, overstated income from security deposits. The bookkeeping fee pays for itself. Usually several times over.
If you want a quote, reach out to us. We will look at your portfolio, your entity structure, and your transaction volume and give you a straight answer.
Generally, yes. Each legal entity needs its own set of books for accurate tax reporting and basis tracking. If you have multiple properties in a single LLC, we use class tracking within that file to report on each property individually.
Property managers typically deposit net rents after deducting fees. We gross up the income and separately categorize the management fee so your Schedule E reflects gross rents and deductible expenses correctly.
A repair restores something to its original condition. An improvement makes it better, adapts it to a new use, or extends its useful life. A patched roof is a repair. A new roof is an improvement. The tax treatment is very different.
Absolutely. We reconcile platform payouts, break out gross bookings versus net deposits, and separately track cleaning fees, service fees, and occupancy taxes. We also help with material participation documentation if you are treating the activity as non-passive.
Monthly. We do not wait until year-end. Monthly reconciliation catches errors early, keeps categorizations current, and gives your tax team data for mid-year planning.
We clean those up too. We review prior-year books, reclassify transactions, fix depreciation schedules, and make sure everything ties to what was filed on your returns. Cleanup is a separate engagement, but it is worth doing because errors compound.
Cost segregation reclassifies building components into shorter depreciation categories. The bookkeeping maintains those schedules and tracks the accelerated deductions. Clean books also help your tax team time the study for maximum benefit.
Yes. We track contractor payments throughout the year, collect W-9 information, and prepare 1099-NECs for anyone you paid $600 or more.
Bank and credit card access (read-only feeds into QBO), your property list with acquisition dates and purchase prices, any existing depreciation schedules, and copies of recent tax returns.
That is a tax planning question, and yes – our tax team handles entity selection and structuring. The bookkeeping and tax teams work together so the structure we recommend is one we can actually maintain efficiently.
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Tax planning season is here! Let's schedule a time to review tax reduction strategies and generate a mock tax return.
Tired of maintaining your own books? Seems like a chore to offload?
Did you want to chat about this? Do you have any questions for us? Let’s chat!
The tax advisors, business consultants and rental property experts at WCG CPAs & Advisors are not salespeople; we are not putting lipstick on a pig expecting you to love it. Our job remains being professionally detached, giving you information and letting you decide within our ethical guidelines and your risk profiles.
We see far too many crazy schemes and half-baked ideas from attorneys and wealth managers. In some cases, they are good ideas. In most cases, all the entities, layering and mixed ownership is only the illusion of precision. As Chris Rock says, just because you can drive your car with your feet doesn’t make it a good idea. In other words, let’s not automatically convert “you can” into “you must.”
Let’s chat so you can be smart about it.
We typically schedule a 20-minute complimentary quick chat with one of our Partners or our amazing Senior Tax Professionals to determine if we are a good fit for each other, and how an engagement with our team looks. Tax returns only? Business advisory? Tax strategy and planning? Rental property support?
Everything you need to help you launch your new business entity from business entity selection to multiple-entity business structures.
Designed for rental property owners where WCG CPAs & Advisors supports you as your real estate CPA.
Everything you need from tax return preparation for your small business to your rental to your corporation is here.
WCG’s primary objective is to help you to feel comfortable about engaging with us