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Idle Versus Vacant Rental Property

By Jason Watson, CPA
Posted Sunday, December 15, 2025

Key Takeaways

  • Vacant and Idle Are Not the Same Thing (Even If the IRS Makes It Feel That Way). IRS Pub 527 uses both terms loosely, but they live in different contexts: vacancy speaks to expenses, while idle speaks to depreciation, and the distinction matters once a property isn’t tenant-ready.
  • Placed in Service and Held for Income Are Two Separate Gates. Depreciation hinges on whether the rental property remains placed in service as defined, while operating expenses hinge on whether it is held for the production of income (including your intent), and you often need to clear both to keep full rental tax deductions.
  • Intent Is the Thread That Ties Everything Together. Whether a rental property is idle, temporarily offline, or withdrawn from service ultimately comes down to provable intent to rent again, not just how empty or torn apart the property looks.

This is a mini series with a total of five sections- the tease or intro, and the four sections describing each scenario. Before we get into that, here are two pieces of verbiage from IRS Publication 527 Residential Rental Property

Idle Property
Continue to claim a deduction for depreciation on property used in your rental activity even if it is temporarily idle (not in use). For example, if you must make repairs after a tenant moves out, you still depreciate the rental property during the time it isn’t available for rent

Vacant rental property.
If you hold property for rental purposes, you may be able to deduct your ordinary and necessary expenses (including depreciation) for managing, conserving, or maintaining the property while the property is vacant. However, you can’t deduct any loss of rental income for the period the property is vacant.

We’ll introduce another term that is not found in tax code or publications but will prove to be useful-

Temporarily Offline
As long as you can prove a renovation is temporary and you intend to rent it again (as seen in Subt v. Commissioner Tax Court Memo 1991-429 in a following section but you need to wait for it), the property is not considered a “permanently withdrawn from use” as described in Treasury Regulations Section 1.168(i)-8(b)(2).

As such, it remains “Placed in Service,” allowing you to continue depreciating the building structure. “Held for the production of income” allows you to continue deducting operating expenses even though it isn’t currently ready and available for a tenant or guest. Yes, you need both to fully deduct both depreciation and expenses.

How is idle different than vacant? The IRS publication is terribly vague (shocker, we know) and perhaps duplicative suggesting that idle and vacant are synonymous. Practically they are, but technically they are not.

To be fair, the idle property blurb is under a section on depreciation whereas vacant rental property is under a section on types of deductible rental property expenses. Also, idle property is not limited to rental properties- it can be applied to any asset associated with a business activity including real estate. Your machinery cannot be vacant but it can be idle.

Vacant, idle, temporarily offline and blah blah blah all seem to be intermixed and confusing. You are correct, and we will attempt to uncomplicate the confusing. Why do you care as a rental property owner? Let’s explore four scenarios-

  • Vacant and Held For Investment Only (speculation play)
  • Vacant and Idle (lack of market, light duty repairs)
  • Vacant and Temporarily Offline (renovations intent to rent again)
  • Vacant and Withdrawn From Service (reno to sell, conversion to personal use)

Jason Watson, CPA, is a partner and the CEO of WCG CPAs & Advisors, a boutique yet progressive tax, accounting and rental property consultation firm with over 90 team members headquartered in Colorado serving real estate investors worldwide.

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I Just Got A Rental, What Do I Do? 2025 Edition

I Just Got A Rental, What Do I Do? 2025 EditionThis KB article is an excerpt from our 480+ page book (some picture pages, but no scratch and sniff) which was updated October 6, 2025, and is available in paperback from Amazon, as an eBook for Kindle and as a PDF from ClickBank. We used to publish with iTunes and Nook, but keeping up with two different formats was brutal. You can cruise through these KB articles online, click on the fancy buttons below or visit our webpage which provides more information.

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For the 2026 tax season, we’re thrilled to introduce the Rental Expert Pod or REP for short. This is WCG’s dedicated team of real estate CPAs and rental property tax specialists focused on optimizing your tax position, ensuring compliance, and helping you build long-term wealth through smart real estate strategies. [Learn More]

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