Why landlords dread tax season
Ask any small landlord what the worst part of owning rental property is, and tax time comes up in almost every conversation. Not because the tax rules are particularly complicated — most small landlords with a few residential units have a relatively straightforward return. The problem is the records.
By the time February rolls around, the receipts from March's plumbing repair are buried in email. The insurance renewal invoice is somewhere in the filing cabinet. The spreadsheet you started in January has three months of entries and then nothing. The bank statement has 14 transfers in and out and you can't remember which were rent and which were something else.
Tax season is hard because record-keeping throughout the year was hard. Fix the latter and the former becomes almost automatic.
What your accountant actually needs
Before diving into what to collect, it helps to understand what your accountant is trying to build: a clear picture of every dollar that came in from each rental property, and every dollar you spent on it, sorted into the right expense categories.
That's it. The complexity comes from the fact that most landlords haven't been sorting expenses into categories as they go — so the accountant ends up doing that categorisation work in April, at their billing rate.
Give your accountant the following and the meeting will be short:
- Total rental income received per property (broken down by month if possible)
- Total expenses per property, already sorted by category
- Mortgage interest paid (from your year-end mortgage statement)
- Property tax paid (from your annual notice)
- Capital improvements made during the year (separate from repairs)
- Details of any periods of vacancy
If you can hand over a clean income and expense report that already has these numbers, your accountant's job becomes reviewing and filing — not archaeology.
Documents every landlord should have ready
Start collecting these in a dedicated folder (physical or digital) for each property, from January 1:
- Rent receipts or bank records showing each payment received
- Year-end mortgage statement showing total interest paid
- Property tax notice for the year
- Insurance renewal invoice
- Receipts for all repairs and maintenance (plumber, electrician, handyman, supplies)
- Property management fees if you use a manager
- Advertising costs (listing fees, photographs)
- Legal and accounting fees related to the rental
- Utility bills you pay on behalf of tenants
- Invoices for capital improvements (new roof, HVAC, appliances)
- Any court or tribunal filing fees
- Travel expenses to visit the property (keep a log)
Capital improvements vs repairs: This distinction matters. A repair restores something to its original condition and is expensed in the year you pay for it. An improvement adds value or extends the useful life of the property and must be depreciated over multiple years. When in doubt, ask your accountant — getting this wrong in either direction has tax consequences.
Income vs expenses — how to organise
The simplest system is a dedicated spreadsheet or app with two sections per property: income and expenses. Here's what each section should capture:
Income
Record every rent payment as it arrives: date received, amount, which tenant, which property. If you received a security deposit, it is generally not income until you determine you'll keep some or all of it. Late fees are income in the year received.
Expenses
Categorise every expense at the time you pay it. The categories that matter are:
- Advertising — listing fees, photos, signage
- Insurance — landlord/rental property insurance premiums
- Legal and professional fees — lawyer, accountant, paralegal
- Management fees — if you use a property manager
- Mortgage interest — from your annual statement (not principal)
- Repairs and maintenance — anything that restores without improving
- Supplies — cleaning products, small tools, light bulbs
- Taxes — property taxes only
- Utilities — if you pay them on behalf of the tenant
- Other — anything that doesn't fit neatly above
The closer your expense categories match Schedule E (US) or the CRA's rental income form T776 (Canada), the less work your accountant has to do.
What Schedule E covers (and what it doesn't)
If you're a US-based landlord, your rental income and expenses flow through Schedule E of your Form 1040. Here's what it covers:
Reported on Schedule E
- Gross rents received
- Advertising, auto and travel, cleaning and maintenance, commissions, insurance, legal and professional fees, management fees, mortgage interest, other interest, repairs, supplies, taxes, utilities, depreciation
- Net rental income or loss (which then flows to your main return)
Not reported on Schedule E
- Security deposits you plan to return (these aren't income until you keep them)
- Mortgage principal payments (only the interest portion is deductible)
- Capital improvements — these go on Form 4562 for depreciation
- Your own labour (you can't deduct the value of your time)
Canadian landlords report on Form T776 (Statement of Real Estate Rentals), which uses similar categories. The CRA's list of allowable expenses closely parallels the IRS Schedule E categories.
Depreciation matters: In the US, residential rental property is depreciated over 27.5 years using the straight-line method. Most small landlords don't track this themselves — their accountant does. But you need to give them the original purchase price, closing costs, and the cost of any capital improvements to get the calculation right.
How to track everything automatically
The reason most landlords arrive at tax time with incomplete records is that manual tracking requires discipline every single month. A repair invoice arrives, you pay it, and you tell yourself you'll add it to the spreadsheet later. By April, "later" is nine months ago.
The better approach is a system that captures records as a byproduct of normal activity — not a separate task you have to remember.
Bank sync
Connect your rental bank account to a tool like RentDesk and every transaction is automatically pulled in. Incoming rent payments are matched to tenants. Outgoing payments are flagged for categorisation. Instead of reconstructing the year from bank statements, you're reviewing a running log that's already 80% correct.
Log expenses at the point of payment
When you pay a plumber, open the app and log it. Takes 30 seconds. The receipt photo goes in alongside it. By December, you have a complete, categorised expense record — not a stack of emails to sort through.
Run the report in January
With your income and expenses tracked throughout the year, generating the tax report takes one click. A clean PDF with income and expenses per property, sorted by category. That's what goes to your accountant.
The landlords who dread tax season are the ones who tracked nothing. The landlords who find it painless tracked everything automatically, one entry at a time.
RentDesk syncs with your bank via Plaid, automatically logs rent payments, lets you categorise expenses in seconds, and generates a tax-ready income and expense report for each property. Try it free for 14 days.
Frequently asked questions
When do I need to file taxes on rental income?
In the US, rental income is reported on Schedule E of your Form 1040, due by April 15 (or October 15 with an extension). In Canada, it's reported on Form T776, filed with your T1 personal return by April 30. If you're unsure of your specific deadline, check with a local accountant.
Do I need a separate bank account for my rental property?
You're not legally required to, but it makes tax preparation dramatically easier. A dedicated rental account means every transaction is clearly in or out of the rental business — no sifting through personal expenses to find the plumber invoice from March.
What records should I keep for rental property taxes?
Keep records of all rental income received, all expenses paid (with receipts), mortgage statements showing interest paid, property tax notices, and any capital improvement records. The CRA and IRS both recommend keeping records for at least six years.