Your K-1 shows a loss but no distribution. Here is what happened.

Many investors see a loss in Box 1 or Box 2 and zero in Box 19 and wonder what went wrong. The short answer: nothing. This is actually one of the most favorable positions you can be in.

Why a loss with no distribution is common

This typically happens in the early years of a real estate syndication. The partnership is using accelerated depreciation (often through cost segregation) to generate large paper losses. At the same time, cash flow is being used for operations, debt service, reserves, or capital improvements rather than distributions.

The loss on your K-1 is driven by depreciation — the IRS allowing you to deduct the cost of the building over time. It is not a real economic loss. The property may be appreciating while the K-1 shows a loss.

How the loss helps your taxes anyway

Even without receiving cash, the K-1 loss can offset other passive income on your return. If you have K-1 income from another partnership, rental income from other properties, or other passive sources, this loss reduces the tax you owe on those.

If you do not have enough passive income to absorb the loss, it carries forward on Form 8582 as a suspended passive loss. It waits there — indefinitely — until you either generate passive income or sell your partnership interest, at which point all accumulated losses are released and can offset any type of income.

Example scenario

You invested $50,000 in a real estate syndication in 2025. Your first K-1 shows Box 2 at -$22,000 and Box 19 at $0. The $22,000 loss can offset passive income from other investments. If you have no other passive income, the loss carries forward. When the property sells in 5 years, any accumulated suspended losses are released against the sale proceeds, potentially eliminating or reducing your capital gains tax.

When to be concerned

A loss with no distribution is not automatically bad, but you should understand why distributions are not flowing. Ask the fund manager or GP these questions:

  • When are distributions expected to begin?
  • Is cash being held for capital improvements or reserves?
  • Is the property cash-flow positive at the operating level?
  • Are there debt covenants preventing distributions?

Questions for your CPA

  • How much passive income do I have from other sources to absorb this loss?
  • What is my total suspended passive loss balance?
  • Should I consider Real Estate Professional status to unlock these losses?
  • How will the suspended losses interact with a future sale of this investment?

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Frequently asked questions about Schedule K-1

Common questions from investors receiving their first K-1 or looking to better understand what the form means.