Key Takeaways
- Short-term rentals (average stay ≤7 days) are not automatically classified as passive activities under IRC §469(j)(10)
- If you materially participate, STR losses can offset W-2 wages, salaries, and other active income
- This does NOT require Real Estate Professional Status (REPS)—that is a separate provision for long-term landlords
- Cost segregation can generate $50K–$100K+ in Year 1 depreciation deductions, giving the loophole its teeth
What Is the “STR Loophole”?
The phrase gets thrown around on BiggerPockets and TikTok like it’s a secret hack. It isn’t. The so-called STR loophole is a straightforward application of existing tax law—specifically, the interaction between IRC §469 (the passive activity loss rules) and the definition of “rental activity” in the Treasury Regulations.
Here’s the core rule: under the passive activity loss (PAL) rules, rental activities are generally considered passive. That means losses from rental real estate can only offset other passive income—not your W-2, not your business income, not your spouse’s salary. This is why most long-term landlords can’t use rental depreciation to reduce their tax bill in a meaningful way until they sell.
But there’s an exception. IRC §469(j)(10) and Treas. Reg. §1.469-1T(e)(3)(ii)(A) state that a rental activity where the average period of customer use is 7 days or less is not treated as a rental activity for purposes of the passive loss rules. In plain English: if your average guest stay is a week or less, the IRS does not automatically classify your rental income and losses as passive.
That single exception is the entire “loophole.” Once the activity escapes the automatic passive classification, it’s treated like any other trade or business. If you materially participate, the income is active. If the activity produces a loss—typically through accelerated depreciation—that loss offsets your W-2, 1099, and other active income. For a deeper look at how STR owners use this to offset W-2 income with rental depreciation, see our companion article.
How It Works: The Two-Part Test
Getting non-passive treatment for your STR requires satisfying two independent conditions. Miss either one, and the losses stay passive.
Calculate your weighted average guest stay across all bookings for the tax year. If it’s 7.0 days or fewer, the activity is not automatically passive. Most Airbnb, VRBO, and direct-booking STRs clear this easily—typical vacation rental stays average 3–5 nights. The 7-day threshold is calculated per rental unit if you own multiple. Be careful with 30-day minimums or monthly winter rentals that can push the average above 7.
Once the activity isn’t automatically passive, you still need to materially participate for losses to be non-passive. The IRS provides seven tests (detailed below). You only need to meet one. This is where documentation matters—keep a contemporaneous log of hours spent on the activity.
When both conditions are met, losses from the STR—including accelerated depreciation from a cost segregation study—flow through to offset wages, salaries, business income, and other non-passive income on your return. This is how a W-2 earner can legally use real estate depreciation to reduce their overall tax bill.
The Seven Material Participation Tests
Material participation is defined in Treas. Reg. §1.469-5T. The IRS provides seven alternative tests. You only need to satisfy one.
| Test | Requirement | STR Applicability |
|---|---|---|
| Test 1 | 750+ hours in the activity during the tax year | Most reliable for hands-on owners managing 1–3 properties. Roughly 15 hrs/week. |
| Test 2 | Your participation constitutes substantially all participation in the activity | Works if you have no property manager, co-host, or employees involved. |
| Test 3 | 500+ hours and no one else participates more than you | Similar to Test 1 but with a lower hour threshold if you’re the primary operator. |
| Test 4 | 100+ hours and no other individual participates more | Commonly used by STR owners who self-manage. 100 hours is roughly 2 hrs/week. |
| Test 5 | 500+ hours across all significant participation activities | Useful if you own multiple STRs and can aggregate hours across them. |
| Test 6 | Material participation in the activity in any 5 of the prior 10 tax years | Applies to established STR owners with a track record. |
| Test 7 | 100+ hours in a personal service activity you materially participated in for any 5 of the prior 10 years | Narrow application, but available if you have a long history with the property. |
Highlighted rows indicate the tests most commonly relied upon by STR owners. Source: Treas. Reg. §1.469-5T(a).
What counts as participation hours?
The IRS counts time spent on activities that a property owner or operator would ordinarily perform. For an STR, this includes: guest communication and booking management, pricing and revenue management, cleaning coordination and quality checks, maintenance scheduling and oversight, supply purchasing and restocking, listing creation and updates, reviewing financials and bookkeeping for the activity, traveling to and from the property for management purposes, and supervising or directing contractors and cleaners.
Time spent as an investor (reviewing monthly statements, occasional check-ins) does not count. The participation must be regular, continuous, and substantial—and it must be documented. A spreadsheet or calendar log with dates, hours, and activities performed is the standard CPA recommendation. Do not rely on estimates at year-end.
Why This Doesn’t Work for Long-Term Rentals
The 7-day exception is the entire difference. A long-term rental with 12-month leases has an average customer use period of 365 days—well above the 7-day threshold. That means the activity is automatically classified as passive, and losses can only offset passive income.
Short-Term Rental (≤7 days avg)
Not automatically passive under IRC §469(j)(10)
Material participation → losses are non-passive
Depreciation offsets W-2 and active income
No REPS required
Long-Term Rental (>7 days avg)
Automatically passive under PAL rules
Material participation alone does not change the classification
Losses limited to passive income (with $25K exception for AGI <$150K)
Requires REPS to make losses non-passive—see our REPS guide
Long-term landlords have a narrow escape valve: the $25,000 rental loss allowance under IRC §469(i), which phases out between $100K and $150K of modified AGI. For high-income W-2 earners, that allowance is zero. The only other route is Real Estate Professional Status (REPS), which requires 750+ hours in real property trades or businesses and that real estate be your primary occupation. Most W-2 employees cannot qualify.
The STR loophole sidesteps both limitations. No income phaseout, no REPS requirement. Just a 7-day average stay and material participation.
How Cost Segregation Supercharges the Loophole
The STR loophole creates the legal framework for non-passive treatment. Cost segregation creates the loss that makes it worth using.
Without cost segregation, a $750K STR (after subtracting land) depreciates on a straight 27.5-year schedule. That’s roughly $21,800 per year in depreciation—not enough to generate a meaningful loss against rental income for most properties.
With cost segregation, an engineering-based study identifies the specific building components that qualify for accelerated depreciation under IRC §168. Cabinetry, appliances, flooring, light fixtures, and furnishings are 5-year property. Certain specialty items are 7-year property. Driveways, landscaping, fencing, pools, and patios are 15-year land improvements. Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, all of these qualify for 100% bonus depreciation—meaning the full reclassified amount is deductible in Year 1.
For a furnished STR, 30–34% of the depreciable basis typically qualifies for acceleration. On a $750K property with a $600K depreciable basis, that’s $180K–$204K deducted in the first year instead of $21,800. The difference between those numbers is the gap between a minor paperwork exercise and a five-figure reduction in your tax bill. For the full breakdown of how cost segregation works for Airbnb properties, see our detailed guide.
Worked Example: $750K Airbnb vs. $200K W-2 Income
Here is what the numbers look like for a W-2 couple earning $200K who purchase a $750K furnished Airbnb in the Smoky Mountains and commission a cost segregation study.
$750K Furnished STR — Year 1 Tax Impact
Assume the property generates $45,000 in gross rental income and has $30,000 in operating expenses (cleaning, maintenance, insurance, property management, supplies, utilities). Net cash flow before depreciation is $15,000.
After subtracting $206,836 in depreciation, the STR produces a paper loss of roughly $191,836. Because the owners materially participate and the average guest stay is under 7 days, this loss is non-passive. It flows directly against their $200K in W-2 income.
At a combined 32% marginal federal rate, that produces approximately $61,400 in federal tax savings in Year 1. Add state income tax savings in states that conform to federal depreciation, and the total benefit is often $65K–$75K. The cost segregation study that produced this result: $795.
The STR loophole doesn’t create income from nothing. It accelerates depreciation that you’re already entitled to. The tax savings are real and immediate, but they shift deductions from future years into the present. When you sell the property, depreciation recapture under IRC §1250 applies at a 25% rate. Your CPA should model the full holding-period impact.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. The STR loophole and REPS are separate provisions. Under IRC §469(j)(10), rental activities with an average customer stay of 7 days or less are not automatically treated as passive. If you materially participate in the STR activity, losses are non-passive and can offset W-2 income regardless of REPS. REPS is a separate path that applies to long-term rentals where the average stay exceeds 7 days. For more detail, see our guide on whether you need REPS for cost segregation.
The test is based on the weighted average of all customer use periods during the tax year, not a strict per-booking cutoff. A few 10-day bookings won’t disqualify you as long as the overall average stays at or below 7 days. However, if you regularly accept 30-day bookings (common for “snowbird” winter stays or traveling nurse housing), those longer stays can push your average above 7 and reclassify the entire activity as passive. Track your average monthly and adjust your booking strategy if needed.
Yes. Under Treas. Reg. §1.469-5T(f)(3), participation by a taxpayer’s spouse counts as participation by the taxpayer, regardless of whether the spouse has an ownership interest. If one spouse manages guest communication and the other handles cleaning and maintenance, their combined hours count toward the material participation threshold. This makes Test 4 (100+ hours, no one else participates more) achievable for most couples who self-manage even a single STR.
Related Articles
How STR Owners Offset W-2 Income With Rental Depreciation
The mechanics of using short-term rental losses to reduce your tax bill on employment income.
Do I Need Real Estate Professional Status for Cost Segregation?
REPS vs. the STR exception: which path applies to your situation and what each one requires.
Cost Segregation for Airbnb Properties: A Complete Guide
How Airbnb and short-term rental investors use cost segregation to accelerate $20K–$80K in depreciation deductions.