If you have a financial advisor, you’re already ahead of the curve. Having someone in your corner to help you plan for retirement, manage your portfolio, and think through big financial decisions is a big advantage, and we’d never suggest otherwise.
That said, it’s worth sitting down with your advisor to talk through real estate investing. Not all financial advisors are well-versed, and if yours has limited experience with investment properties in particular, you could walk away with the wrong idea.
That’s no knock on advisors; it’s just the reality of a specialized field. Keep these things in mind as you talk to or select your financial advisor:
The majority of financial advisors build their careers around stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and retirement accounts. Those are the instruments they’re licensed to sell and advise on. Real estate sits in a whole different world with its own tax considerations, financing structures, risk profiles, and wealth-building mechanics.
So when a newer investor asks their advisor whether they should buy a rental property, the advisor may give a perfectly reasonable answer based on general principles. But they may not know the specifics of how depreciation offsets taxable income, how a debt-service coverage ratio (DSCR) loan works, or how a self-directed IRA (SDIRA) can be used to purchase investment property.
These details make a difference in how a property performs and how prepared you are.
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Real estate comes with a set of tax advantages that don't apply to most other asset classes, and they're meaningful enough to significantly affect your return picture.
A few things worth understanding before your next advisor conversation:
If your advisor isn't familiar with these strategies, they may default to a generic "real estate vs. the stock market" comparison that doesn't account for the full picture.
Make no mistake, this isn't us saying you must replace your financial advisor. A strong FA helps you consider your overall financial health, asset-class diversification, retirement planning, and risk tolerance. That big-picture perspective is invaluable when you're deciding whether and how much to allocate to real estate.
What you may need to add to that relationship is a CPA with real estate experience. Not all CPAs are real estate-savvy, either, but the right one can ensure your properties are structured and reported in a way that captures every available advantage. Ideally, your advisor and your CPA are synced up.
When you go into an advisor conversation about real estate, come prepared. Know what questions you want answered. Ask specifically about depreciation, entity structure, and how rental income affects your overall tax situation. If they draw a blank or give a vague answer, that's useful information: it tells you where to seek additional expertise.
If you're just starting out, you may not have an advisor yet, or you may be working with one who focuses primarily on your employer-sponsored retirement accounts. That's a fine place to start, but as your wealth grows and your investment goals become more specific, your advisory team should grow with it.
Real estate investing, particularly the turnkey buy-and-hold model, is a long-term strategy. The investors who get the most out of it are the ones who treat it like a business: with proper planning, the right professionals on their team, and a clear picture of how it fits into their broader financial life.
Your REI Nation portfolio advisor is a great starting point for that conversation. We work with investors every day who are figuring out exactly how real estate fits into their picture, and we're happy to help you get there, too.