Nonpassive Income and Losses
What they are
Nonpassive income and losses arise from activities in which a taxpayer materially participates. Nonpassive income includes wages, active business profits, self-employment earnings, and certain investment proceeds when the taxpayer is actively involved. Nonpassive losses are losses tied to those same actively managed activities and generally can be deducted in the year they occur against other nonpassive income.
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How the IRS determines nonpassive activity
The distinction between passive and nonpassive hinges on material participation. The IRS provides several tests for material participation; the two most commonly referenced are:
* More than 500 hours of participation in an activity during the tax year.
* At least 100 hours, if no other partner or co‑worker puts in more hours than the taxpayer that year.
Other indicators of material participation include regular, continuous, and substantial involvement. Simply holding a managerial title or logging token hours primarily to claim participation may not meet the IRS standard. Spouses’ participation can count toward material participation. Most rental activities are treated as passive unless the taxpayer qualifies as a real estate professional or otherwise meets material participation rules. Short‑term rentals (e.g., Airbnb) can be treated differently depending on services provided and rental patterns.
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Common examples of nonpassive income
(Representative activities that typically qualify as nonpassive when you materially participate)
* Wages and salaries (Form W‑2)
* Income from operating a business or trade (sole proprietorship, Schedule C)
* Self‑employment and gig work (freelance, ride‑share, delivery)
* Professional practice income (doctors, lawyers, consultants)
* Actively managed partnership income (when you materially participate; reported on Schedule K‑1)
* Active stock trading and other investment activity that involves frequent, continuous trading
* Income from selling goods or services (retail, catering, event planning, photography, software development)
Common examples of nonpassive losses
* Operating losses from an actively managed business (retail, restaurants, professional practice)
* Project losses from construction, development, or real estate when actively managed
* Losses from freelancing or gig work when expenses exceed income
* Losses reported by actively participating partners or S‑corp shareholders
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Reporting nonpassive activity on tax returns
* Wages and employment income are reported on Form W‑2.
* Sole proprietors report business income and losses on Schedule C.
* Partners and S‑corporation shareholders receive Schedule K‑1 and must classify their share of income or loss as passive or nonpassive based on material participation.
Nonpassive losses generally offset other nonpassive income, reducing taxable income and potentially self‑employment tax liability where applicable.
Passive activity losses — key contrasts
Passive activity losses (PALs) come from activities in which the taxpayer does not materially participate (and generally from rental activities). Important tax rules:
* PALs can be used only to offset passive income, not nonpassive income.
* Excess passive losses are carried forward indefinitely to offset future passive income or may be deductible when the activity is disposed of in a taxable transaction.
* Taxpayers can group related passive activities into one economic unit under certain conditions.
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Tax implications
* Nonpassive income is taxed at ordinary income rates and may also be subject to self‑employment tax if earned from a trade or business.
* Nonpassive losses reduce taxable nonpassive income in the year incurred (subject to normal tax rules and limitations).
Converting passive income to nonpassive
To change passive income into nonpassive income, increase your level of material participation—more time on the activity, active management or provision of services, and involvement in decision‑making. For example, offering property management services for a rental can change the tax characterization if the material participation tests are met.
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Industries that commonly see high nonpassive losses
Startups, technology companies, and hospitality businesses often report substantial nonpassive losses due to high upfront investment, operating costs, competitive pressure, and market volatility.
Bottom line
Nonpassive income and losses flow from activities where you materially participate. Properly classifying activity as passive or nonpassive affects how income is taxed and how losses may be used. Track time and duties carefully, understand the IRS material participation tests, and report income and losses on the appropriate tax forms (W‑2, Schedule C, Schedule K‑1) to ensure correct tax treatment.