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Fund managers often focus on the major tax strategies: depreciation, cost segregation, entity structure, and fund documentation. These are essential, but there is another layer of tax efficiency that is frequently ignored. Individual investors and fund managers regularly overlook small but meaningful deductions that accumulate over time. When they are not tracked or allocated properly, they reduce basis, inflate taxable gains, and undermine long-term returns.
In the world of alternative investments, every dollar matters. Small inefficiencies compound across deals, across funds, and across years. These overlooked deductions can be the difference between tax-efficient performance and unnecessary tax exposure.
This blog breaks down the most common missed deductions, how basis adjustments work, and what fund managers should be doing to help their investors capture every allowable tax benefit.
When investors calculate their returns, they often think in terms of capital raised, distributions received, and final sale proceeds. However, the IRS sees investments through the lens of basis. If an investor fails to account for all deductible costs incurred while making or managing investments, their outside basis remains artificially low.
A lower basis increases taxable gain at exit.
For example, if an investor contributes 100,000 into a fund but incurs 1,200 in wire fees, travel costs, and due diligence expenses that are never added to basis, the IRS still views their basis as 100,000, not 101,200. When the investment is sold, the unclaimed deductions show up in the form of higher capital gain.
These small errors compound over the life of a fund and across an investor’s portfolio.
Fund managers can help their investors by understanding how basis works and guiding them toward proper documentation.
Every time an investor wires funds into a deal, their bank typically charges a fee. These fees range from 20 to 40 dollars per wire and occur every time capital is sent to a sponsor or fund.
Wire fees are deductible investment expenses and should be included in the investor’s outside basis. Yet most investors never track them.
For large LPs who regularly invest across multiple deals, the cumulative missed basis adjustments can reach thousands of dollars over time.
Fund managers should educate LPs about tracking these fees or provide automated investor portals that help document them.
Investors who travel to evaluate a property, attend an investor tour, or perform due diligence are allowed to deduct travel costs related to evaluating an opportunity. This can include:
Flights
Hotels
Rental cars
Meals related to due diligence
Mileage for local travel
These costs can be added to basis or deducted directly, depending on the circumstances. Many investors assume these expenses are personal and fail to document them. They are not personal if they relate to an active effort to evaluate an investment.
Fund managers conducting in-person investor events should ensure LPs understand these rules.
Many sophisticated investors use a dedicated holding company, such as a parent LLC, to organize their investment activity. These entities often incur expenses that are ordinary and necessary for income-producing investment activity.
Examples include:
Accounting and bookkeeping costs
Bank fees
Legal expenses
Subscription tools for financial analysis
Office supplies related to investment management
If these expenses are not captured and linked to the activity of investing, investors lose legitimate deductions.
Fund managers should encourage serious LPs to maintain a holding company structure with proper recordkeeping.
Investors frequently hire professionals to review offering documents, perform tax planning, or evaluate economic assumptions. These expenses are often deductible as investment-related fees.
Examples include:
CPA consultations
Real estate attorney review
Financial modeling assistance
Due diligence specialists
Many professionals fail to classify these expenses correctly, causing investors to lose the deduction.
Fund managers should reinforce the importance of saving receipts and associating them with corresponding investments.
Investors incur costs related to moving or deploying capital. This can include:
Loan origination fees for lines of credit used to invest
Costs of selling other securities to free up capital
Exchange or transfer fees
These expenses must be tracked carefully. If they are not recorded and allocated properly, basis errors can compound over time.
Investors who use self directed IRAs or qualified retirement plans often pay custodial fees. These fees are generally deductible within the IRA. Many custodians allow expenses to be paid by check from the IRA itself, but investors often pay them personally and lose the deduction.
Fund managers should remind IRA investors to pay fees from the IRA when possible.
Although these deductions are investor-level costs, fund managers are directly affected when investors fail to claim them.
1. Higher Perceived Tax Liability at Exit: When investors have lower basis because they failed to track expenses, they often blame the fund when their taxable gain is higher than expected.
2. Increased Investor Questions: Investors who experience unexpected tax outcomes typically direct questions and frustrations toward the GP team.
3. Reduced After Tax Returns: Fund managers market after tax performance. When investors capture fewer deductions, their after tax returns appear weaker, which can make capital raising more difficult.
4. Missed Opportunities to Build Credibility: Fund managers who proactively educate investors on overlooked deductions position themselves as more sophisticated, detail oriented, and trustworthy.
Most LPs do not understand how basis works. They assume their contribution amount equals their basis and that basis only changes through distributions or allocations.
In reality, basis is affected by dozens of small factors:
Contribution amount
Debt allocation
Deductible investor expenses
Fees incurred to make the investment
Loss allocations
Depreciation
Distributions
Refinancing events
When these components are not tracked consistently, errors accumulate.
The best fund managers explain these rules clearly and encourage LPs to maintain accurate records.
Fund managers do not need to provide tax advice to help investors capture deductions. Simple steps can create significant value:
1. Provide guidance in investor onboarding documents: Explain which costs investors should track and how these costs affect basis.
2. Include reminders in quarterly communications: Prompt LPs to record wire fees, travel expenses, and entity-level costs.
3. Offer standardized templates: Provide simple worksheets investors can use to track expenses.
4. Train investor relations teams: Ensure the team can answer general questions about investment-related deductions without providing tax advice.
5. Coordinate with CPAs: Work with your tax team to identify areas where LPs often make errors and provide proactive education.
Fund managers who help their investors improve tax outcomes strengthen trust and improve long-term relationships.
The tax code is full of small opportunities that become meaningful when added up over time. Capturing overlooked deductions:
Raises investor after tax returns
Reduces taxable gains
Improves basis accuracy
Strengthens fund performance metrics
Enhances credibility with LPs
Fund managers who understand this can position their funds as tax efficient, sophisticated, and investor aligned.
If you want to understand how these overlooked deductions affect your investors, your fund structure, and your tax strategy, now is the time to take action. There is still time to review your documentation, refine your approach, and implement better tracking systems before year-end. Once the year closes, these opportunities are gone.
Schedule Your Tax Strategy Session Now

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