07/02/2026
Is Your Land Portfolio a Business or a Hobby? The IRS Knows the Difference.
Most investors focus on the "buy low, sell high" of land, but the real wealth is made—or lost—in the accounting methodology.
In 2026, the landscape is shifting. With the "One Big Beautiful Bill" (OBBBA) changes now in full effect, land investors need to be sharper than ever with their books. Here are the three pillars I'm seeing separate the pros from the amateurs:
🔹 The Carrying Cost Strategy: Are you capitalizing your property taxes and interest into your basis, or expensing them? If you have no other income to offset this year, capitalizing might be the move to slash your capital gains hit later.
🔹 Dealer vs. Investor Status: This is the "Million Dollar Distinction." If the IRS labels you a "Dealer," say goodbye to Capital Gains rates and hello to ordinary income tax + self-employment tax. Your intent, frequency of sales, and development activity are the evidence.
🔹 The "Inventory" Mindset: For flippers, land isn't a fixed asset; it's inventory. That means no depreciation (ever) and very specific rules on when you can actually deduct your "Cost of Goods Sold."
The bottom line: Land is a quiet asset, but its accounting is loud. Don't wait until April to find out you've been "hobby-level" with your records.