Most real estate investors hold their first property personally or in a single-member LLC they set up themselves. That works. But "works" is not the same as "optimal" — and as portfolios grow, the gap between a default structure and a well-designed one often measures in tens of thousands of dollars annually.
Entity structuring is not a one-size answer. The right structure depends on the type of real estate income you generate, your income level, your state, your exit strategy, and whether you're focused on asset protection, tax minimization, or estate planning. This guide covers the four primary vehicles — LLC, S-Corp, LP/FLP, and Series LLC — with a worked example comparing their tax impact on the same $1.2M portfolio.
Why Entity Structure Matters
Two things are at stake in every entity structuring decision: liability exposure and tax treatment. These goals are not always aligned, which is why getting the structure right requires modeling your actual numbers — not copying what another investor did.
Liability protection is about separating your personal assets from property-level risk. A lawsuit stemming from a slip-and-fall at your rental property can, without an entity, reach your personal bank accounts, your home, and your other investments. An LLC creates a legal boundary that limits that exposure to the assets held inside the entity.
Tax efficiency is about how income flows through the entity and what rate it's taxed at. This includes self-employment tax exposure (15.3% on net earnings, up to the Social Security wage base and 2.9% Medicare above it), the qualified business income (QBI) deduction under Section 199A, depreciation and loss utilization, and estate planning implications.
The critical insight: personal ownership and a single-member LLC have identical federal tax treatment — both are "disregarded entities" taxed on Schedule E. The entity choice only starts affecting your taxes when you elect S-Corp status, use an LP structure, or add a management company layer.
LLC — The Default Choice and When It's Right
The LLC is the right starting point for almost every real estate investor. It's simple, flexible, and provides meaningful liability protection at low cost and administrative burden.
How it's taxed
A single-member LLC is a disregarded entity — rental income flows to your Schedule E, passive losses offset passive income, and there's no self-employment tax on passive rental income. A multi-member LLC is treated as a partnership, filing Form 1065 with K-1s to each partner.
When it's the right structure
- Passive rental income — long-term residential or commercial rentals where you're not materially participating. No SE tax exposure, no S-Corp benefit.
- Properties below $500K in value — the complexity cost of more sophisticated structures doesn't pay off until portfolio size justifies it.
- Early portfolio building — when simplicity and low overhead matter more than optimization.
- Estate planning flexibility — single-member LLCs are easy to restructure or convert later.
The one thing most investors get wrong with LLCs
Holding multiple properties in a single LLC is a common mistake. One lawsuit at one property exposes all assets in that LLC. The standard practice is one LLC per property, or one per property group when properties are financed together. The cost is filing fees and a separate bank account per entity — worth it for meaningful liability isolation.
S-Corp — When Rental Income Triggers SE Tax Savings
An S-Corp is not a separate entity type — it's a federal tax election you make on an existing LLC or corporation (Form 2553). The election changes how income is taxed, not how the business is owned or managed.
The SE tax arbitrage
Without an S-Corp, all net income from active real estate activity (house flipping, development, short-term rentals run as a business, management fees) is subject to self-employment tax: 15.3% on the first ~$168,600 and 2.9% Medicare above that. This is on top of income tax.
With an S-Corp election, you split that income into two pieces:
- Reasonable salary — subject to payroll taxes (same as SE tax)
- Distributions — taxed as ordinary income but NOT subject to SE tax or payroll taxes
The "reasonable salary" is the hinge. You must pay yourself a salary that the IRS would consider reasonable for the work you do. Anything above that can flow as a distribution — saving 15.3% (or 2.9%) on that portion.
When S-Corp does NOT help
For most passive rental portfolios, an S-Corp election is neutral or negative. Passive rental income is already exempt from SE tax. An S-Corp on a passive portfolio adds compliance cost (separate tax return, payroll processing, officer compensation requirements) without any offsetting tax benefit. This is one of the most common costly mistakes we see — investors electing S-Corp status on passive rental LLCs after reading forum posts.
S-Corp elections should be considered for:
- House flipping or development businesses (dealer property, active income)
- Short-term rental operators who materially participate
- Real estate professionals earning management fees or commissions
- Property management companies
LP / FLP — For Portfolio Investors and Estate Planning
A Limited Partnership (LP) or Family Limited Partnership (FLP) is a more sophisticated structure primarily used by investors with larger portfolios who are focused on estate planning, asset protection across generations, or consolidating multiple properties under professional management.
Structure overview
An LP has two classes of partners: a General Partner (GP) who manages the entity and bears unlimited liability, and Limited Partners (LPs) who have limited liability but no management control. Typically, the GP is an LLC (to limit the GP's personal liability), and the investor holds both the GP-LLC and LP interests.
Estate planning leverage
The FLP's primary advantage is valuation discounts. Because LP interests come with restrictions on transferability and lack of control, they can be valued at 20–40% below the proportional value of the underlying assets for gift and estate tax purposes. This is IRS-recognized and documented in the tax code — an investor can transfer $1M in real estate value to heirs at a gift tax value of $650,000–$800,000.
When LP/FLP makes sense
- Portfolios over $2M with estate planning concerns
- Investors with high federal estate tax exposure (estate over ~$13.6M for 2026)
- Multi-generational wealth transfer strategies
- Investors wanting to bring in family members as passive LPs
The FLP requires genuine non-tax business purpose, annual formalities, and must be structured by an attorney experienced in estate planning. Improperly formed FLPs are regularly challenged by the IRS under the "economic substance" doctrine.
Series LLC — For Multi-Property Investors in Applicable States
A Series LLC is a single legal entity with the ability to create internal "cells" or "series" that hold separate assets with separate liability. Each series is legally isolated — a judgment against assets in Series A cannot reach assets in Series B.
The operational advantage
Instead of forming, maintaining, and filing returns for 10 separate LLCs (10 sets of state fees, 10 registered agents, 10 operating agreements), a Series LLC achieves the same liability isolation under one umbrella entity with internal accounting separation.
The limitations
- Limited state availability. Series LLCs are recognized in approximately 20 states as of 2026 (Texas, Delaware, Nevada, Illinois, and others). Not recognized in California, New York, or several other major real estate markets.
- Uncertain cross-state recognition. If your Series LLC is formed in Texas but owns property in a non-Series-LLC state, the liability isolation may not hold.
- Tax treatment is still being clarified. The IRS has not issued definitive guidance on whether each series is a separate entity for tax purposes — creating some uncertainty for multi-series operations.
Worked Example: $1.2M Rental Portfolio
To make this concrete, here's the same investor across four structures. Assumptions:
- 4-unit multifamily property, $1.2M purchase price, $960K depreciable basis
- $96,000 annual gross rent, $42,000 operating expenses, $54,000 NOI
- Investor has W-2 income of $180,000 — in the 32% federal bracket
- This is passive rental income (long-term tenants, not short-term rental)
- Standard depreciation only (no cost segregation study applied yet)
| Structure | SE Tax on Rental Income | Annual Compliance Cost | Estate Planning Benefit | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal ownership | $0 (passive income) | $0 | None | Starting out — simplest |
| Single-member LLC | $0 (passive income) | $200–$800/yr (state fees) | Minimal | Most investors — liability protection, tax-transparent |
| S-Corp election | $0 (passive — no benefit) | $2,000–$4,000/yr (payroll + return) | None | Wrong fit for passive rental income |
| LP / FLP | $0 (passive income) | $1,500–$3,500/yr | High — valuation discounts 20–40% | Estate planning focus, portfolio $2M+ |
| Series LLC | $0 (passive income) | $500–$1,500/yr (one entity) | Minimal | 10+ properties in applicable states |
Key takeaway for this investor: With purely passive rental income, the entity structure doesn't change the tax outcome. It changes the liability protection profile and the estate planning optionality. The right answer is an LLC per property for liability isolation — not an S-Corp (which adds cost with no benefit for passive income).
Now add a cost segregation study to this same property. In year one, the LLC investor captures an additional $50,000+ in accelerated depreciation — reducing taxable income dollar-for-dollar. The entity structure didn't generate that savings; the tax strategy layered on top of it did. Entity structuring creates the container. Strategies like cost segregation, bonus depreciation, and 1031 exchanges fill it.
Common Mistakes
1. Holding properties in personal name
Personal ownership offers zero liability protection. A single tenant lawsuit can reach your personal assets. The annual cost of maintaining an LLC is $200–$800 in most states — not a meaningful barrier for any investor with meaningful assets.
2. Single-member LLC without an Operating Agreement
An LLC without a written Operating Agreement is a liability protection risk. Courts in many states will pierce the corporate veil if there's no formalized documentation separating personal and business activity. The OS defines ownership, capital contributions, and distribution rights — it matters in disputes.
3. S-Corp election on passive rental income
This is the mistake we see most often. An investor reads a post about S-Corps saving self-employment tax, forms an S-Corp for their rental LLCs, pays $2,000–$4,000 per year in compliance costs, and saves zero dollars in taxes because passive rental income was never subject to SE tax in the first place.
4. All properties in one LLC
If all five of your properties are in a single LLC, one liability event at one property can reach the equity in all five. Per-property LLC protection is inexpensive insurance.
5. Mixing personal and business funds
An LLC that doesn't have its own bank account, that pays personal expenses from business funds, or that doesn't maintain separate books is legally vulnerable. Courts treat commingling of funds as evidence that the LLC is not a distinct legal entity — allowing creditors to pierce the veil.
Entity structuring is a foundational decision that shapes every other tax strategy. Cost segregation deductions, bonus depreciation, and 1031 exchange planning all flow through the entity. Get the foundation right before layering on strategies.
<\!-- RELATED ARTICLES -->