Most investors buy an Orlando vacation rental for the cash flow. But the tax benefits can be just as powerful, sometimes more so. Between depreciation, the 14-day rule, cost segregation, and the short-term rental loophole, a vacation home in Orlando can significantly reduce your overall tax burden if structured correctly.
I own 10+ vacation rental properties and work with investors across 40+ Orlando communities. The tax conversation comes up in nearly every deal. Here’s what you need to understand before you buy, and before you file.
Depreciation: the foundation of vacation rental tax benefits
When you purchase a vacation rental property, the IRS allows you to deduct a portion of the property’s value each year as it “wears out.” This is depreciation, and for residential rental property, the IRS spreads it over 27.5 years.
Here’s what that looks like in practice. If you buy a vacation home in Storey Lake Resort for $450,000, and the land is valued at $50,000, your depreciable basis is $400,000. Divided by 27.5 years, that’s roughly $14,545 per year in depreciation deductions, even though you haven’t spent a dollar. That deduction reduces your taxable rental income and can even create a paper loss.
Depreciation applies to the structure, not the land. It applies to furnishings, appliances, and improvements on shorter schedules (5-7 years for furniture, 15 years for land improvements like fencing or landscaping). This matters because shorter depreciation schedules mean larger annual deductions.
Cost segregation: accelerating depreciation into Year 1
Standard depreciation spreads deductions over decades. A cost segregation study compresses them.
A cost segregation study is a detailed engineering analysis that reclassifies portions of your property into shorter-lived asset categories. Instead of depreciating your entire $400,000 building over 27.5 years, a cost seg study might identify 20-40% of the property as 5-year, 7-year, or 15-year assets. Flooring, cabinetry, appliances, light fixtures, outdoor hardscaping, even certain electrical and plumbing components can qualify.
With 100% bonus depreciation (reinstated for qualifying property acquired after January 19, 2025), those reclassified assets can be deducted entirely in Year 1. On a $450,000 property where 30% is reclassified, that’s $120,000+ in first-year deductions.
Cost segregation studies typically cost $3,000-$8,000 depending on property value, but the tax savings frequently exceed the cost by 10x or more. For investors purchasing in communities like Reunion Resort or ChampionsGate at higher price points, the math becomes even more compelling.
The 14-day rule: tax-free rental income
The IRS 14-day rule (also called the “Masters exemption”) is straightforward:
If you rent your property for 14 days or fewer per year, you do not have to report any of that rental income. It’s completely tax-free. No limit on how much you charge per night.
For most Orlando vacation rental investors running a full-time STR business, this rule won’t apply since you’re renting far more than 14 days. But it’s relevant in two scenarios:
Scenario 1: You own a personal vacation home in Orlando that you primarily use yourself, and you rent it out for a couple of peak weeks (like Christmas or Spring Break). If you keep rentals to 14 days or fewer, you pocket whatever you earn with zero tax liability on that income.
Scenario 2: You’re testing the short-term rental waters before committing. Rent your property for up to two weeks, collect the income tax-free, and evaluate demand before going full-time.
The flip side: if you rent for 14 days or fewer, you cannot deduct rental-related expenses against that income. You still deduct mortgage interest and property taxes on Schedule A as normal homeowner deductions, but not rental-specific expenses like cleaning or management fees.
The personal use threshold: what counts
If you rent for more than 14 days per year (which applies to virtually every Orlando STR investor), the IRS looks at how much you personally use the property. If personal use exceeds the greater of 14 days or 10% of total rental days, the property is classified as a “personal residence” and expense deductions are limited.
The IRS defines personal use broadly. Any day you, a family member, or anyone paying below fair market rent uses the property counts as personal use. Days spent doing maintenance or repairs do not count, as long as the primary purpose is maintenance.
For investors treating their Orlando vacation rental as a pure business (most of my clients), this threshold is easy to manage. Keep personal use under 14 days per year, and you maintain full deduction eligibility.
The STR loophole: offsetting W-2 income with rental losses
This is the strategy that gets high-earning investors excited.
Normally, rental losses are classified as passive under IRC Section 469, meaning they can only offset other passive income, not your salary or business income. But short-term rentals with an average guest stay of 7 days or fewer are not automatically classified as passive rental activities.
If you materially participate in managing your STR, those losses become non-passive. That means paper losses from depreciation (especially accelerated depreciation through cost segregation) can offset your W-2 income, business income, or any other active income.
Material participation requirements (you need to meet at least one):
- You spend more than 500 hours per year on the rental activity
- You spend more than 100 hours AND more than anyone else involved (including your property manager)
- You perform substantially all the work yourself
This is different from Real Estate Professional Status (REPS), which requires 750+ hours across all real estate activities and that real estate be your primary occupation. The STR loophole has a lower bar. Many investors with full-time W-2 jobs can qualify as long as they’re actively involved in managing their short-term rental.
For Orlando investors, this is powerful. Buy a property in a community like Storey Drive Resort, run a cost segregation study, take 100% bonus depreciation on reclassified assets, materially participate in management, and potentially use six figures of paper losses to offset your primary income taxes in Year 1.
Deductible expenses every Orlando STR owner should track
Beyond depreciation, these expenses reduce your taxable rental income dollar-for-dollar:
- Mortgage interest on the rental property
- Property taxes (Orange, Osceola, or Polk County)
- Insurance (homeowners, liability, short-term rental specific coverage)
- Property management fees (typically 15-25% of gross revenue)
- Repairs and maintenance (pool service, HVAC, appliance fixes, repainting)
- Utilities (electric, water, gas, internet, cable)
- Cleaning and turnover costs
- Furnishing and supplies (linens, kitchenware, consumables)
- Platform fees (Airbnb/VRBO host fees)
- HOA/CDD fees
- Professional services (accounting, legal, bookkeeping)
- Travel expenses to visit the property for management purposes
- Marketing (professional photography, listing optimization)
- Florida sales tax and county tourist tax remitted
- Software (PMS, dynamic pricing tools, smart lock subscriptions)
If you’re operating a vacation rental in one of Orlando’s top investment communities, these deductions add up fast. A well-run STR in a community like Solara Resort or Windsor Island might generate $15,000-$25,000 in deductible operating expenses annually before depreciation even enters the picture.
Florida-specific tax advantages
Orlando investors get an additional edge: Florida has no state income tax. Your rental income, capital gains on sale, and any other earnings from your vacation property are not subject to state income tax. Combined with federal deductions, this makes Florida one of the most tax-friendly states for vacation rental ownership.
You will need to collect and remit Florida’s 6% sales tax plus your county’s tourist development tax (6% in Osceola County, 6% in Orange County).
These are pass-through taxes collected from guests, not out of your pocket, and the taxes you do remit are deductible business expenses. If you need help getting your STR licenses and tax numbers in order, the process takes 2-6 weeks.
What I tell my clients
Tax strategy should be part of your investment thesis from Day 1, not an afterthought at filing time. The investors I work with who maximize their returns typically do three things:
1. They buy with tax structure in mind. Choosing the right entity (LLC, S-Corp, or individual ownership) and understanding how depreciation fits their overall income picture before closing.
2. They run a cost segregation study within the first year. The ROI on this is almost always worth it for properties above $300,000.
3. They track everything. Mileage, receipts, and hours spent managing the property. Documentation is what protects you in an audit.
I always recommend my clients work with a CPA who specializes in real estate and short-term rentals. General tax preparers often miss these strategies. The right CPA will save you multiples of their fee.
| THINKING ABOUT BUYING AN ORLANDO VACATION RENTAL? I help investors find the right property in the right community with the right numbers. Let’s talk. 503-888-8070 | [email protected] | mikechenrealtor.com/schedule |
Frequently asked questions
Can I depreciate furniture and appliances separately from the building?
Yes. Furniture, appliances, and other personal property are depreciated over 5-7 years (depending on the asset class), not 27.5 years. With 100% bonus depreciation reinstated in 2025, qualifying assets can be fully deducted in the year they’re placed in service. This is one reason a cost segregation study is so valuable, as it identifies and reclassifies these shorter-lived components.
Does the 14-day rule apply if I use a property manager?
The 14-day rule is about how many days the property is rented, not who manages it. If your property is rented 14 days or fewer, income is tax-free regardless of whether you self-manage or use a property management company. But if you’re running a full-time STR business (which most Orlando investors are), you’ll far exceed 14 rental days and this rule won’t apply to you.
Can I use the STR loophole if I have a property manager?
Potentially, but it’s harder. You need to demonstrate material participation (100+ hours AND more hours than your manager, or 500+ hours total). If your management company handles most operational tasks, you may not meet the threshold. Activities that count include guest communication, pricing decisions, marketing, coordinating repairs, reviewing financials, and making strategic decisions. Keep detailed time logs.
What happens to depreciation when I sell the property?
When you sell, the IRS “recaptures” depreciation you’ve claimed. The recaptured amount is taxed at up to 25% (Section 1250 recapture). However, many investors use a 1031 exchange to defer both capital gains and depreciation recapture by rolling proceeds into another investment property. I wrote about how 1031 exchanges work for STR investors in detail.
Is there a minimum property value for cost segregation to make sense?
Most CPAs recommend cost segregation for properties valued at $300,000 or more. Below that, the study cost ($3,000-$8,000) may not generate enough additional deductions to justify the expense. For Orlando vacation rentals in resort communities, most properties easily exceed this threshold.
About the Author
Michael Chen, PA, is a Realtor at La Rosa Realty, Celebration, serving Orlando and Miami. He co-owns FunStay Homes, managing 100+ vacation rental properties across 40+ communities. Mike is an Airbnb Superhost with 2,600+ guest reviews and has personally owned 10+ vacation properties since 2017.
Contact: 503-888-8070 | [email protected] | Schedule a Call
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