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From the Stonehan Vault

What AI Can't Do: The Judgment Behind Real Estate Fund Tax Work

What AI Can't Do: The Judgment Behind Real Estate Fund Tax Work

May 05, 20264 min read

AI can process data quickly. It can pull numbers, flag inconsistencies, and generate drafts faster than any human.

What it cannot do is look at a real estate fund's allocation structure and know, from experience, that something is off.

That kind of judgment is not a feature. It is the product of years working inside complex fund structures, seeing how decisions play out, and understanding what the tax code actually rewards when it is applied with intention.

For real estate fund managers, that distinction matters more than most people realize.

This is where fund manager tax strategy becomes more than a compliance exercise. In real estate investing, the tax outcome is shaped by how the real estate fund structure is designed, how allocations are drafted, and how fund investor tax reporting is executed across the lifecycle of the fund. These are not isolated decisions. They sit at the intersection of real estate fund tax planning and broader private equity tax planning, where small structural differences can create materially different outcomes for investors.

Tax Work at the Fund Level Is Not a Data Problem

Most tax software and AI tools are built around inputs and outputs. You put the numbers in, you get a return out.

Real estate fund tax work does not operate that way.

A seasoned CPA for fund managers does not start with the numbers. They start with the structure. How are allocations drafted? Do the economics in the operating agreement actually reflect what the partners agreed to? Is the depreciation flowing to the partners who can use it? Does the waterfall interact with the tax reporting in the way the manager expects?

These are judgment calls that require understanding both the legal structure and the tax consequences simultaneously. AI does not carry that context. It processes what it is given. It does not know what it is not seeing.

Fund Allocations Require Pattern Recognition, Not Just Calculation

One of the most valuable things an experienced tax advisor for fund managers brings to the table is pattern recognition.

When a CPA reviews fund allocations and something looks wrong, it rarely shows up as an obvious error. It shows up as a number that is technically correct but structurally inconsistent with how the fund was designed to operate.

That kind of review requires:

  • familiarity with how GP LP structures behave across different deal types

  • understanding of how Section 704(b) allocations interact with economic intent

  • experience seeing what happens when allocation language is vague or boilerplate

  • the ability to trace a problem backward from a K-1 to the operating agreement to the original deal structure

None of that is pattern matching against a dataset. It is judgment built from repetition across real fund tax planning situations.

The Cost of Getting Fund Allocations Wrong

Allocation errors in real estate funds are not self-correcting.

When depreciation flows to the wrong partner, when a preferred return is calculated inconsistently with the agreement, or when a guaranteed payment is mischaracterized, the consequences compound across multiple tax years and multiple investors.

Correcting those errors after the fact is expensive, disruptive to investor relationships, and in some cases requires amended returns across the entire LP base.

The fund manager bears responsibility for the accuracy of what goes out under their fund. That responsibility does not transfer to the software used to produce the returns.

This is why real estate fund tax planning requires human judgment at the review layer, not just at the execution layer.

AI Is a Tool. Judgment Is the Standard.

The question is not whether AI has a role in fund tax work. It does.

The question is whether the person overseeing that work has the experience to know when the output is right and when it needs to be challenged.

A qualified CPA for fund managers uses every available tool to work efficiently. The value they add is not in the processing. It is in the review. It is in catching what the tool missed. It is in the questions they ask before the return is filed that prevent problems from surfacing years later.

That layer of oversight is not optional in a real estate fund. It is what separates disciplined fund tax planning from a liability waiting to surface.

If your fund's tax work has been running on process without that review layer, now is the time to evaluate what that exposure looks like.

You can book a time here: https://calendly.com/jamesbohan/book-a-call


CPA for fund managersreal estate fund tax planningfund allocationstax advisor for fund managersfund manager tax strategyGP LP structurereal estate fund structurefund investor tax reportingprivate equity tax planning
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James Bohan

James Bohan is a CPA, fourth-generation real estate developer, and founder of Stonehan Accountancy. He advises fund managers, syndicators, and high-net-worth investors on tax-efficient strategies to grow and preserve wealth.

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Seven Critical Factors Most CPA's Overlook

Seven Critical Factors Most CPA's Overlook

There’s a difference between working with a CPA and working with an entrepreneurial CFO focused on serving fellow entrepreneurs. At Stonehan we guide our clients by going beyond surface level investigation, into the nuances that only sophisticated investors can appreciate.

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