For Bay Area hotel, motel, and short-term rental property owners — cost segregation, occupancy tax compliance, owner compensation, and the financial reporting hotel lenders expect.
Hospitality property owners blend real estate ownership with operating business economics — and the tax planning has to work for both sides.
Hotels and motels carry significant cost segregation opportunity. Most property owners hear about it years after acquisition, when the highest-impact years have passed.
Transient occupancy tax (TOT), state lodging tax, and STR-specific taxes have local rules that vary by jurisdiction. Mistakes compound quickly.
Hands-on hotel owners need to balance reasonable comp, distribution structure, and real-estate-vs-business income recognition correctly.
Hotel lenders expect specific financial reporting — STAR reports, comp-set analysis, debt-service coverage — most general bookkeeping does not produce.
We work with Bay Area hotel, motel, and short-term rental owners on the financial side of running a hospitality property.
Coordination with engineering firms, modeling of deduction acceleration, and integration with depreciation and recapture planning.
TOT and state lodging tax registration, filings, and reconciliation. STR-specific tax handling where applicable.
Single-LLC vs. holding-company structures for property ownership, operating company separation, and asset protection coordination.
Reasonable compensation modeling, W-2 vs. distribution mix, and integration with personal tax planning.
Monthly P&L formatted for hospitality lenders, debt-service coverage tracking, and covenant compliance reporting.
Property-level bookkeeping, payroll oversight, and tax-ready year-end coordination.
A hotel is a hybrid — part real estate investment, part operating business. The tax planning has to account for both sides. Cost segregation on the building, occupancy tax on the operations, owner compensation that respects both. CPA depth in this industry compounds over the years of ownership.
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