A Tax Break (Up To 20%!) For Dividend Investors? It’s True

 | Feb 26, 2020 06:19AM ET

If you own any real estate investment trusts (REITs), make sure you forward this article along to your tax advisor!

Historically, REIT distributions have been considered nonqualified dividends by the IRS. This means they usually get taxed at your regular income tax rate.

However, REIT investors now benefit from the same tax break that “pass through” businesses receive. As a general rule, REIT investors are now allowed to deduct 20% of their REIT dividend income.

Before we dive deeper into the REIT equity pool, let me give the usual disclaimer that I am not a tax professional myself. (I do, however, spend a healthy amount of time in my CPA’s office keeping him and his staff hustling to crunch the numbers on my various business interests.)

Now, back to REITs. For whatever reason, income investors don’t buy enough of them, in my opinion. Perhaps it’s because these stocks get lumped into one asset class (like utilities, or municipal bonds.)

But REITs run the gamut, from retail landlords (which have been getting crushed) to self-storage REITs (which benefit from Americans accumulating more and more “stuff” and having to put it somewhere).

For example, let’s take one of the best retail REITs, Simon Property Group (NYSE:SPG), and compare it with my favorite self-storage REIT, National Storage Affiliates Trust (NYSE:NSA). Both are best of breed in their respective industries. However, one breed is becoming increasingly extinct!

I’ve never recommended SPG because, in recent years, I’ve been concerned that Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) was simply going to eat its tenants’ lunch. After all, Amazon packages arrive at our doorstep daily, and each purchase we make on Amazon is one less drive we make to a local store (one that, potentially, has a rent payment due to Simon.)

On the other hand, National Storage runs facilities and rents out space in the fastest growing markets in the US. When we initially bought the stock for our Hidden Yields portfolio in August 2016, the locations that housed the vast majority of its facilities (92% of them!) were projected to grow 45% faster than the national average.

The rising tide lifted NSA’s payout and stock price. Meanwhile, the Amazon cloud put a lid on SPG. SPG was the same “investment vehicle” as NSA in theory, with polar opposite returns in practice!

2 REITs with Nothing in Common