PA

Rental Property Tax Guide for Pennsylvania (2026)

By RentalReportLab Team • Updated March 2026

Key Facts for Pennsylvania Landlords

State Income Tax

3.07% flat

Avg. Property Tax Rate

1.58%

Depreciation

Follows federal (27.5 years)

  • Low flat income tax (3.07%)
  • High property taxes
  • Philadelphia has city wage tax and local tenant protections
  • No statewide rent control

Pennsylvania Rental Property Tax Overview

Pennsylvania imposes a state income tax of 3.07% flat on rental income, in addition to federal income taxes. As a Pennsylvania landlord, you'll need to report rental income on both your federal return (IRS Schedule E) and your PA state return. The state tax is calculated on your net rental income after deductions, and the same deductions you claim on Schedule E generally apply at the state level.

Property taxes in Pennsylvania average 1.58%, which is above the national average of approximately 1.1%. Property taxes are fully deductible on IRS Schedule E, Line 16. Popular rental markets in Pennsylvania include Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Allentown, State College.

Deductible Rental Property Expenses in Pennsylvania

The following expenses are deductible on IRS Schedule E for your Pennsylvania rental properties. RentalReportLab automatically maps each expense to the correct Schedule E line item.

ExpenseSchedule E LineNotes
Advertising / Platform FeesLine 5Airbnb/VRBO fees, listing costs
Auto & TravelLine 6Mileage to property for management
Cleaning & MaintenanceLine 7Regular upkeep, cleaning between tenants
InsuranceLine 9Landlord policy, liability, umbrella
Legal & ProfessionalLine 10Attorney, CPA, property manager fees
Management FeesLine 11Property management company (8-25%)
Mortgage InterestLine 12Interest portion only (not principal)
RepairsLine 14Fixes that restore condition (not improve)
SuppliesLine 15Hardware, cleaning supplies, keys
Property TaxesLine 16Pennsylvania avg: 1.58%
UtilitiesLine 17If landlord-paid: electric, gas, water, internet
DepreciationLine 1827.5-year straight-line (building only)

Filing Schedule E for Pennsylvania Properties

As a Pennsylvania landlord, you report rental income and expenses on IRS Schedule E (Form 1040). Each property is listed separately on Schedule E with its address and rental days. Your net rental income (or loss) flows to your Form 1040. You'll also need to report this income on your PA state return. Most Pennsylvania tax forms reference your federal Schedule E amounts.

RentalReportLab generates a Schedule E-mapped P&L report that organizes your income and expenses exactly as they appear on the form. Print it, hand it to your CPA, and you're done. Or share a read-only link directly with your accountant.

Important Deadlines for Pennsylvania Landlords

  • April 15, 2026: Federal tax return deadline (IRS Schedule E)
  • April 15, 2026: PA state income tax return deadline (most states align with federal)
  • October 15, 2026: Extended federal tax return deadline (if filed for extension)
  • January 31, 2027: Send 1099-NEC to contractors paid $600+ during 2026

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Tax laws change frequently. Consult a qualified CPA or tax professional for guidance specific to your Pennsylvania rental properties.

Frequently Asked Questions

More State Tax Guides

Track your Pennsylvania rental properties for free

RentalReportLab maps every expense to the correct IRS Schedule E line item. Generate your PA rental property P&L report in seconds.

  • Free forever for 1 property
  • Schedule E categories pre-built
  • Depreciation auto-calculated
  • Accountant share links included