Summer is the busiest season for Bronx rental properties. Tenants move, boilers get replaced, roofs get patched, and Housing Court calendars fill up. Every one of those activities creates a tax deduction — and most small landlords miss at least half of them.
If you own a two-family in Throggs Neck or a six-unit walk-up in Mott Haven, the difference between sloppy and sharp recordkeeping is often $3,000 to $8,000 a year in real cash. Here are five deductions Bronx owners routinely leave on the table.
1. Mileage to Your Property, the Hardware Store, and Housing Court
The IRS standard mileage rate for 2026 is projected around 70 cents per mile. If you drive from your home in Riverdale to a property in Hunts Point twice a week, then to Bronx Housing Court at 1118 Grand Concourse for a non-payment case, then to the Home Depot on Bruckner Boulevard — you're easily logging 4,000–6,000 deductible miles a year.
That's $2,800–$4,200 in deductions, and almost no one tracks it.
What to do
- Use a free app like MileIQ or Stride to auto-log trips
- Keep a note of the purpose (showing, repair, court, bank, supplies)
- Personal commuting doesn't count — but every trip tied to the rental does
If you're managing the property yourself, this single deduction often pays for a year of professional bookkeeping.
2. The Repair-vs-Improvement Distinction (and Why Summer Matters)
Summer is when landlords replace boilers, repoint brick, patch flat roofs, and redo bathrooms between tenants. The IRS treats these very differently:
- Repairs (fixing a leak, patching plaster, replacing a broken window) — fully deductible in the year you pay
- Improvements (new roof, new boiler, full kitchen renovation) — must be depreciated over 27.5 years
Here's where Bronx owners lose money: they lump everything into "renovations" on their books, and their accountant capitalizes the whole thing. A $4,200 boiler repair that should have been a current-year deduction becomes a $153/year depreciation drip.
The safe harbor most landlords ignore
The IRS De Minimis Safe Harbor lets you immediately expense any item under $2,500 per invoice, even if it would normally be a capital improvement. New stove? Refrigerator? Water heater under $2,500? Expense it now — don't depreciate it for a decade.
You need a written capitalization policy in place before January 1 of the tax year. It's a one-page document. Most CPAs will draft it free if you ask.
3. Home Office Deduction — Yes, Even If You Only Own One Building
If you have a dedicated space at home where you handle tenant emails, screen applicants, pay vendors, and store leases — that's a home office. You don't need to be a full-time landlord.
The simplified method gives you $5 per square foot up to 300 square feet — a flat $1,500 deduction with zero receipts required.
The regular method (actual expenses based on square footage percentage) is often larger. A 200 sq ft office in a 1,400 sq ft Bronx co-op with $18,000 in annual housing costs is roughly $2,570 in deductions.
The catch: the space must be used regularly and exclusively for the rental business. Your kid's homework table doesn't count.
4. Professional Fees — Including the Ones You Forgot You Paid
This is the deduction bucket where Bronx landlords leak the most money, because the expenses are scattered across the calendar and across vendors. Fully deductible items most owners miss:
- HPD violation correction fees and certifications
- DOB filing fees for boiler inspections, facade work, elevator inspections
- LL97 emissions reporting consultants (if your building is over 25,000 sq ft)
- Local Law 11 (facade) engineer reports
- Lead paint (Local Law 31) XRF testing — roughly $400–$800 per unit
- Eviction attorney fees, even if you lost the case
- Property management fees
- Bookkeeping, tax prep, and the portion of your accountant's fee related to the rental
- Landlord association dues (CHIP, RSA, SBJSA)
A Bronx fourplex owner I reviewed last year had $11,400 in professional fees buried across 23 different vendors. None of it was on her Schedule E. DoryAngel's owner dashboard tracks these in real time so they don't disappear into a pile of January receipts.
5. Travel, Meals, and Education Tied to the Business
This one surprises people. If you flew to a real estate investing conference in Miami, or drove upstate to scout a 1031 exchange property, those costs are deductible. So is:
- 50% of meals with your attorney, accountant, broker, or contractor when business is discussed
- Books, courses, and seminars on landlording, NYC compliance, or tax strategy
- Subscriptions to industry publications (The Real Deal, Crain's NY Business)
- Continuing education for a real estate license if you hold one
A $1,800 weekend at a multifamily investing summit is real money back in your pocket — but only if you have the receipt and a calendar entry showing the business purpose.
The Summer Action Plan
While your peers are at the beach, spend 90 minutes this month doing these four things:
- Open a dedicated bank account and credit card for the rental if you don't already have one. Commingling is the #1 reason audits go badly.
- Install a mileage tracking app today — it won't reconstruct January, but it'll capture the rest of the year.
- Pull your last 12 months of bank statements and highlight every vendor payment. You'll be shocked how many you forgot.
- Schedule a 30-minute call with a CPA who specializes in NYC rentals — not your cousin who does individual returns. The good ones save you 5–10x their fee.
The IRS doesn't send refunds for deductions you forgot. Every July receipt you don't track is money you're handing back to Washington — money that could be patching the next roof or buying the next building.