You earn $800,000 a year. You are very good at what you do. You are a surgeon, or a software executive, or a business owner who has built something real. You pay your taxes like a responsible citizen. And every April, when you write a check to the IRS for a sum that could purchase a rather nice house in many American cities, you think: there has to be a better way.
There is. You've seen it. Your friend bought a rental property and now he owes nothing. Not a dime. He talks about "depreciation" and "cost segregation" and "deferred taxes" with the enthusiasm of a man who has found religion. You nod. You go home. You Google it.
What you find is this: the United States government allows real estate investors to deduct the theoretical decline in value of a building they own. Even as that building is, in most cases, appreciating. Dollar for dollar, it is the single most powerful tax benefit available to an American citizen. It is not a loophole. It is the law.
"I make $1.2 million a year. My real estate agent pays less in federal taxes than my receptionist. I needed to know her secret. Turns out the secret was her."— Dr. James K., Orthopedic Surgeon, Recaptured Love Member Since 2024
So you buy a rental property. You hire a CPA. You claim the depreciation. You wait for the magic. And nothing happens.
Your CPA calls with the bad news. The losses from your rental property are "passive." Your W-2 income is "active." The IRS, which encourages real estate investment with one hand, has built a wall between these two categories with the other. It is called the Passive Activity Loss Rules. It is the reason you are still writing that check every April.
Your friend who pays nothing doesn't have this problem. He qualifies as a Real Estate Professional. He spends 750 hours a year in real estate activities. He materially participates. His passive losses become active losses. They offset everything. His tax bill is zero.
You cannot do this. You are a surgeon. You are in the operating room 60 hours a week. You cannot spend 750 hours a year and more than half your time managing rental properties. It is physically impossible. The tax code has given you a gift with one hand and snatched it away with the other.
Unless you are married to a Real Estate Professional.
This is the part of the tax code your CPA has not told you about. If your spouse qualifies as a Real Estate Professional, if they spend 750 hours a year in real estate activities and materially participate in your rental properties, you can file a joint return and use those passive losses against your combined income. All of it. The W-2. The K-1. Everything.
The surgeon who buys a rental property, hires a cost segregation engineer to accelerate the depreciation, and files jointly with a spouse who is a Real Estate Professional can, in many cases, reduce their federal income tax liability to —
Read that again.
"We didn't just fall in love. We fell into a completely legal, IRS-defensible, joint-filing arrangement that has saved us $327,000 over three tax years. The honeymoon was also lovely."— Sarah & Marcus T., Recaptured Love Success Story
This is where we come in.
Recaptured Love™ is the world's first and, to our knowledge, only matchmaking service designed specifically to introduce high-earning W-2 professionals and business owners to qualified Real Estate Professionals. We are not a dating app. We are a concierge matchmaking service for people who believe the foundation of a great relationship is shared values, mutual respect, and a combined Schedule E that would make their CPA weep.
We find you someone you'll love. Who happens to save you a fortune. Or we find you someone who saves you a fortune. Who you happen to love. Either way, everybody wins. Except the IRS.
Filing Single. Paying Full Price.
You're doing everything right. Except your tax return.
- W-2 income of $500K+ taxed at ordinary rates
- Rental property losses trapped as "passive"
- Can't meet the 750-hour RE Pro test
- Cost seg study sitting unused on your desk
- Effective tax rate: 37–42%
- Drinking alone while reviewing your 1040
Filing Jointly. Living Fully.
Same income. Same properties. Different spouse. Different life.
- Spouse qualifies as a Real Estate Professional
- Passive losses reclassified and fully usable
- Cost seg study generating $100K+ in year-one deductions
- Joint return with massive depreciation offsets
- Effective tax rate: approximately zero
- Drinking together while reviewing your refund
How It Works
The Application.
Tell us about yourself. Your income, your investment goals, your personality, and your preferred filing status. We'll also need your most recent tax return. Think of it as a first date. But with more Schedule K-1s and fewer awkward silences.
The Introduction.
Our team is part matchmaker, part enrolled agent. We curate introductions between high earners and vetted Real Estate Professionals. We consider personal chemistry, investment philosophy, and marginal tax bracket.
The Joint Return.
Fall in love. Get married. File jointly. Watch your tax liability melt away like snow in April. Our partners at R.E. Cost Seg handle the cost segregation studies. Baldridge Ledbetter handles the tax planning. You handle the champagne.
Frequently Asked
Love Stories
"I was paying $380,000 a year in federal income taxes. My CPA said there was nothing he could do. Then I met Rebecca through Recaptured Love. She's a licensed broker with three rentals in Scottsdale. We got married in October. We filed jointly in January. We now owe $4,200. I have never been happier. Emotionally or financially."Dr. Michael R. Interventional Cardiologist, $1.1M W-2 Income
"People think I married Kevin for his money. That's ridiculous. I married Kevin for his tax bracket. The $800,000 W-2 combined with my Real Estate Professional status and four cost seg studies created the most beautiful joint return I've ever seen. Our accountant actually applauded. We're very happy."Rebecca S. Licensed Real Estate Broker & Proud RE Pro Spouse
"I tried everything. An S-Corp. A solo 401(k). A defined benefit plan. A charitable remainder trust. I was still paying 39%. Then my buddy said, 'Have you tried Recaptured Love?' I laughed. Six months later, I met Jennifer. She's a property manager with REPS status. We filed jointly. My effective tax rate last year was 3.2%. I'm not laughing anymore. I'm proposing."Tom W. SaaS Founder, $2.4M Combined W-2 and K-1 Income