If you’re implementing the Augusta Rule, you’re renting to your business. Not to random guests. Not to Airbnb travelers. Not to people you don’t know.
Your business rents your home for legitimate, documented events—like strategy sessions, planning retreats, or team meetings.
That means you decide who attends. It’s fully under your control.
In this video, we break down how the Augusta Rule really works, why the “strangers” concern is irrelevant, and how our Done-for-You “Free Money” Plan makes the process easy, compliant, and stress-free.
Want help applying the rule the right way, with IRS-compliant paperwork, fair market comps, and audit protection?
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All right, you lost me. So, I have to
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rent my home to a stranger. That’s a
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totally common misconception with the
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Augusta rule because we mention the word
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rent and a lot of people who are great
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applicants for the Augusta rule think
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rent my home to someone I don’t know
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does not compute and that’s not the case
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at all. You’re actually renting your
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home to your business. It’s like your
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left hand to your right hand. For tax
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purposes, you are renting to a different
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person, your S corp, your CC Corp,
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whatever. But in fact, you’re renting to
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you and the people you invite. So, as
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long as you don’t invite strangers,
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there won’t be strangers. So, you get to
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choose exactly who you rent to. It’s
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you. It’s your team members. It’s people
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you invite to your home. It’s an
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entirely controlled event, and you
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control it. So, you’re not renting your
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home to strangers at all, unless you
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choose to. You’re running it to people
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you know. In fact, you’re renting it to
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yourself and your team.