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Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Host Tax Calculator — All 50 States + DC (2026)

Rental income tax calculator for short-term rental hosts, including Schedule E deductions and occupancy tax guidance.

15.3%
SE Tax Rate
9
No-Tax States
50 + DC
States Covered
$400
Filing Threshold

Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Host Tax Calculator

Estimate quarterly taxes as a self-employed Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Host

★ = no state income tax

Common: mortgage interest, insurance, utilities

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Select your state and enter income to estimate taxes
Estimates only. Based on 2025 federal tax rates for single filers; state taxes are approximate effective rates. Consult a tax professional for personalized advice. How we calculate these estimates →

Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Host: Top Tax Deductions

The fundamental tax question for short-term rental hosts is Schedule E (passive rental income) vs. Schedule C (active business income). The distinction matters because Schedule C income is subject to self-employment tax (15.3%) while Schedule E income is not. If you provide "substantial services" to guests — daily cleaning, concierge services, meals — the IRS may classify your rental as a business subject to SE tax. Most vacation rental hosts who use cleaning services and don't provide hotel-like amenities can use Schedule E.

Depreciation is the most powerful and often overlooked deduction for rental hosts. The residential property itself is depreciated over 27.5 years. On a $400,000 property, depreciation deductions total approximately $14,545 per year — often generating a "paper loss" on Schedule E even in profitable years. Contents (furniture, appliances, linens) can be depreciated over 5–7 years, or expensed immediately under Section 179.

Operating expenses deductible against rental income include: mortgage interest (rental portion), property taxes (rental portion), homeowners insurance, HOA fees, utilities, cleaning services, Airbnb/Vrbo service fees (3%), repairs and maintenance, and supplies (toiletries, linens, kitchen consumables). For hosts who also use the property personally, expenses must be allocated between rental and personal use based on number of days.

The 14-day rule (Masters exemption) is important for infrequent hosts: if you rent your home for fewer than 15 days per year, the income is completely tax-free and deductions are not allowed. Many homeowners near major events (Super Bowl, Masters golf tournament) rent for exactly 14 days to generate tax-free income. This rule applies to vacation homes used personally for more than 14 days or 10% of rental days.

Common Deductions for Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Host

  • Mortgage interest
  • Insurance
  • Utilities
  • Repairs
  • Cleaning
  • Supplies
  • Depreciation

Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Host Taxes: FAQ

Do Airbnb hosts pay self-employment tax?
Usually no, if you rent without providing substantial services. Rental income on Schedule E is not subject to SE tax. If you provide hotel-like services (daily maid service, meals, tours), the IRS may reclassify as a business with SE tax liability.
What is the 14-day rule for Airbnb hosts?
If you rent your property for fewer than 15 days per year, the rental income is completely tax-free under IRS rules. You also cannot deduct rental expenses. Hosts with properties near major annual events sometimes strategically limit rentals to 14 days.
Does Airbnb report income to the IRS?
Yes. Airbnb issues Form 1099-K to hosts receiving over $20,000 in payments and more than 200 transactions (as of 2024; lower thresholds may apply in future years). Even below these thresholds, all rental income is taxable and must be reported.
How do I calculate the personal vs. rental use allocation?
If you use the property personally for 30 days and rent it for 90 days, rental use is 75%. You can deduct 75% of mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, utilities, and depreciation against rental income. The remaining 25% follows personal deduction rules.
Can I deduct Airbnb service fees and cleaning costs?
Yes. Airbnb's 3% host service fee is fully deductible as a business expense. Professional cleaning costs between guest stays are deductible. If you clean yourself, you cannot deduct your own time — only third-party service costs.

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Disclaimer: Tax estimates on TheCalcDesk are for informational purposes only and are based on 2025 federal tax rates for single filers. Actual tax liability depends on your filing status, all income sources, deductions, and applicable credits. State tax rates shown are representative and may not reflect the exact rate for your income bracket. Consult a licensed tax professional (CPA or EA) for personalized tax advice.