Entity Structuring for Real Estate Investors: Partnerships, LLCs, and Corporations 

Tara (Wilson) Parker, Mark Leverette • April 7, 2026

Industries: Real Estate


The structure you choose for your real estate investments affects your tax bill and liability protection. Many investors start with whatever seems easiest, only to realize later they’re leaving money on the table or exposing themselves to risk. The right entity structure depends on your investment strategy and where you’re heading. 

Identifying the Right Entity Structure 

Understanding how each structure handles taxation, liability protection, and operational flexibility helps you make an informed decision based on your investment goals and timeline. 

Partnerships: Maximum Flexibility with Pass-Through Benefits 

Real estate partnerships offer flexibility that’s hard to find elsewhere. Profits and losses flow directly through to partners’ individual tax returns, avoiding double taxation. You also get the ability to include partnership liabilities in your tax basis, which matters when you’re using leverage. 

Partnerships let you allocate profits and losses in ways that don’t match ownership percentages. If a partner contributes capital while you manage operations, you can structure distributions to reflect those different contributions. 

The trade-off is complexity. Managing multiple partners requires clear operating agreements and navigating partnership tax rules. 

Limited Liability Companies: The Best of Both Worlds 

LLCs combine liability protection with pass-through taxation. Your personal assets stay protected, but you’re not dealing with corporate tax complications. Income and losses flow through to your personal return with flexible management and distribution structures. 

LLCs also give you options. You can elect to be taxed as a partnership, an S corporation, or even a C corporation. That adaptability means your structure can evolve as your portfolio grows. 

The key is setting them up correctly from the start with a solid operating agreement covering management, distributions, and partner exits. 

S Corporations: Pass-Through Status with Built-In Limitations 

S corporations offer pass-through taxation but come with restrictions that often outweigh the benefits for real estate investors. 

S corporations can’t have more than 100 shareholders, and those shareholders must be U.S. citizens or residents. You’re restricted to one class of stock, limiting your ownership structure options. Most importantly, S corporation shareholders can’t include corporate debt in their tax basis the way partners can. When you’re using financing to acquire properties, that difference matters for tax deductions. 

C Corporations: When Traditional Corporate Structure Makes Sense 

C corporations are less common for direct real estate ownership because of double taxation: the corporation pays tax on profits, then shareholders pay tax again on dividends. 

There are situations where a C corporation makes sense, particularly for real estate development companies, and when profits can be reinvested. For most investors focused on rental income or appreciation, the tax disadvantages typically outweigh the benefits. 

Real Estate Investment Trusts: A Specialized Structure 

REITs represent another option for larger portfolios or investors looking to access public markets. REITs avoid corporate-level taxation by distributing at least 90% of their taxable income to shareholders, making them pass-through entities in practice. 

The appeal is clear: no double taxation and the ability to raise capital through publicly traded shares. But REITs come with strict requirements around property types, income sources, and distribution levels. 

If you’re converting from a C corporation to a REIT, the built-in gains tax applies to appreciated property sold within five years of conversion. That requires careful planning. 

For most individual investors, REITs work better as investments rather than as a structure to create. They’re more suited to institutional-scale operations or companies planning to go public. 

Choosing the Right Structure for Your Investments 

The right entity depends on your situation, but here are the key considerations: 

For Most Investors: Start with an LLC 

For most new real estate investors, an LLC delivers the ideal balance: liability protection separating property from personal finances, pass-through taxation avoiding double taxation, and flexibility as your needs change. Single-member LLCs work for solo investors, while multi-member LLCs accommodate partners without S corporation ownership restrictions. 

Scaling Your Portfolio 

As your portfolio grows, consider separate LLCs grouping properties by risk or value. If one faces legal issues, others remain protected. Structuring properties into separate entities also creates more opportunity to leverage tax strategies like cost segregation, which can accelerate depreciation on a property-by-property basis

Structures to Avoid 

Avoid common pitfalls: C corporations create double taxation on gains and trigger taxes when extracting property. S corporations complicate distributions of appreciated property and restrict ownership flexibility. Both work better for operating businesses than real estate. 

Planning Saves Time and Money 

Entity choice affects tax treatment, liability exposure, and exit options. Choosing for convenience rather than strategy often means costly restructuring with legal fees and tax consequences. A properly structured entity protects personal assets, positions you to scale without restructuring, and ensures favorable tax treatment from day one. 

BPM works within the real estate industry at every stage. Contact us today to discuss which structure aligns with your goals.  

Profile picture of Mark Leverette

Mark Leverette

Partner, Assurance and Advisory
Outsourced Accounting Leader
Real Estate Leader

Mark has devoted 20 years of experience to entrepreneurial companies. As the Managing Partner of Client Accounting and Advisory Services …

Profile picture of Tara (Wilson) Parker

Tara (Wilson) Parker

Partner, Tax
Flowthrough Tax Leader

As a Partner in BPM’s Tax Practice, Tara (Wilson) Parker has extensive public accounting and taxation experience, with an emphasis …

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