Advisory

A Tax Eye on the Deal
Before You Close It

The expensive tax mistakes in real estate are not filing errors. They are structural.

A deal closed without checking how it interacts with the rest of the portfolio, a sale timed without looking at losses sitting in another entity, depreciation allocated to a partner who cannot use it. By the time those show up on a return, the decision has already been made. Advisory is the part of the work that changes the outcome instead of reporting it: exit timing, deal structure review, how gains and losses flow to each partner, and entity-level strategy across the portfolio, from an advisor who already holds your books and your compliance context.

No commitment. 30 minutes. Let's see if it's the right fit.


The Back-End Result
Is a Front-End Decision

The tax outcome of a deal, for you and for your investors, is set before you close: how the entity is structured, how depreciation is allocated, what the waterfall looks like, and how the eventual sale is anticipated. Change those after the fact and you are usually just documenting a result you no longer control.

Advisory at the structuring stage means reviewing the operating agreement for tax purposes, not just legal enforceability, and checking whether the allocations meet the substantial economic effect standard before the agreement is signed. It means asking whether a preferred return is being treated as debt or equity, and whether the partners who are absorbing depreciation losses are the ones who can actually use them. These are answerable questions, but only while the structure is still open.

The Exit
You Haven't Modeled

Most operators call about exit planning when they are already under contract. That is too late for most strategies to work. A 1031 exchange is the reflexive answer, and sometimes the right one, but whether it actually benefits your investors depends on their basis positions, their individual tax situations, and whether deferral beats recognition in the current rate environment.

The same analysis has to weigh depreciation recapture exposure, whether losses in other entities can offset the gain, and whether an installment sale or a basis adjustment changes the math. The right time to run it is 12 to 24 months before execution, when the full set of options is still available, not in escrow when they have already narrowed to whatever is left.

Someone Watching
the Whole Thing

Most sophisticated principals work with a patchwork of advisors, each seeing one deal. The result is that nobody is watching the global picture. Losses get stranded in one entity while gains are recognized in another. Depreciation gets allocated without understanding who can use it. Gains get recognized in the wrong year, the wrong entity, or the wrong way.

Advisory at the portfolio level means sitting above the individual deals and connecting the dots across the full structure: harvesting losses against gains, rationalizing entities, coordinating with your attorney and your bookkeeper at the same time, and making sure each decision is made with the rest of the portfolio in view. That is only possible when someone holds the whole picture.

If every advisor only sees one deal, no one is watching how they interact. That gap is where the money leaks.

Flat Fee,
Not a Meter That Runs

Advisory is billed as a recurring flat fee, not hourly and not by the question. Hourly billing puts a meter on every phone call, which teaches clients to avoid calling until the problem is already expensive. A flat fee removes that friction so the small question that prevents the large mistake actually gets asked.

It works because the advice is grounded in your actual situation. Since Surefire holds the books and the compliance context, there is no getting up to speed when something comes up: a sale, a new partner, a restructuring. The information is already there, so the answer is fast and accurate rather than caveated and preliminary.

Go Deeper
on Tax Strategy

Advisory Questions,
Answered Directly

What does ongoing tax advisory for a real estate operator actually cover?

Ongoing advisory means a tax eye on decisions before they are made, not just a return after the year is over. In practice that covers exit timing, deal structure and operating agreement review, how gains and losses flow to each partner, cost segregation and depreciation strategy, 1031 versus recognition analysis, and entity-level planning across the whole portfolio. The point is to influence the outcome while the options are still open, which is only possible if someone is engaged year-round rather than at filing time.

How is advisory billed, and why flat fee instead of hourly?

Advisory is billed as a recurring flat fee rather than hourly or by the question. Hourly billing creates a meter that runs every time you pick up the phone, which trains clients to avoid calling until a problem is already expensive. A flat fee removes that friction: you get ongoing access to an advisor who already knows your business, so the small question that prevents the large mistake actually gets asked.

Why does exit planning need to start 12 to 24 months before a sale?

By the time most operators call about an exit, they are already under contract, and most of the useful strategies require lead time to set up. Whether a 1031 exchange makes sense, whether losses sitting in another entity can offset the gain, whether an installment sale or a basis adjustment helps, and how depreciation recapture will land all depend on positioning that has to happen before escrow. Plan 12 to 24 months out and the full set of options is still on the table. Plan at closing and you are choosing among whatever is left.

What is the advantage of advisory from the same firm that holds the books?

Advice is only as good as the information behind it. A separate advisor has to be brought up to speed on your entity structure, your tax position in each deal, and what your investors are owed before they can say anything useful, and by then the moment has often passed. When the advisor already holds the bookkeeping and the compliance work, the answer is fast and grounded in your actual situation because they are already in it. There is no context gap to close.

Who is advisory the right fit for, and who is it not?

Ongoing advisory pays off when there is real complexity: multiple entities, active deal flow, and decisions that genuinely need a tax eye before they are made. For a single property with a simple structure and no near-term transactions, that level of engagement is more than the situation requires. The honest test is whether the complexity is real. If it is, the integrated approach pays for itself. If it is not, a focused strategy session is usually the better starting point.

Get Started

Let's See If We're the Right Fit

Book a free 30-minute call. We'll go through your entity structure, your deal flow, and what's actually on the table. If it's a fit, we'll both know it.

Book Your Discovery Call

Or reach out directly: matt@surefiretaxco.com