Let's Talk Property Management

Tax Advantages to Renting Your Property

Rental real estate offers tremendous tax advantages and opportunity for tax planning. Taxpayers can depreciate property, deduct interest on borrowed capital, exchange rather than sell properties to defer tax on gains, use installment sales to defer tax on sales, and profit from preferential rates on long-term capital gains. Most importantly, you can generate or monthly income, with depreciation deductions that effectively turn the actual income into tax losses.

Deductions Are Not Unlimited
Real estate income and loss is generally considered passive income and loss for tax purposes. Taxpayers generally cannot use passive activity losses (PALs) to offset ordinary income from employment, self-employment, interest and dividends, or pensions and annuities. The rental real estate loss allowance and real estate professional status are two important exceptions to this rule.

As one exception to the PAL rules, taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes of $150,000 or less can claim a rental real estate loss allowance of up to $25,000 for property they actively manage. Active management does not require regular, continuous, or substantial involvement. However, it does require that the taxpayer own at least 10% of the property. Also, to qualify for the exception, married taxpayers must file jointly.

The second exception allows real estate professionals not to treat their rental activity as a passive activity – losses are not limited to passive income. This exception requires material participation by the taxpayer which is demonstrated by meeting one of seven tests. These tests are complex and include the number of hours of participation and the facts and circumstances of the participation in the activity.

Vacation homes, however, are taxed depending on how long the homeowner rents the property. If you rent your vacation home for fewer than 15 days during the year, no rental income is includible in gross income. If you rent the property for 15 or more days during the tax year and it is used by you for the greater of (a) more than 14 days or (b) more than 10% of the number of days during the year for which the home is rented, the rental deductions are limited. Under this limitation, the amount of the rental activity deductions may not exceed the amount by which the gross income derived from such activity exceeds the deductions otherwise allowable for the property, such as interest and taxes.

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Tags: deductions, management, property, rental, tax

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Comment by Nathan Miller on May 24, 2011 at 9:04am

Aeiko, this is super excellent information!  The thing that gets me about thie PAL rules is it seriously penalizes marriage.  I wrote an article back in 09 about this.  It's a significant disadvantage for real-estate investors who fall into this PAL category whom are married.  The .gov knows the system is broken in that regard but has never done anything to fix it, probably as fixing it would decrease tax revenue.

 

http://activerain.com/blogsview/1126093/the-50-000-marriage-tax-pen...

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