Operating Expenses
For tax purposes, you will figure your profit or loss each year from operating the rental property. Generally, you can virtually deduct all expenses incurred to operate the rental.
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Outright Sale
When a rental property is sold outright, the entire gain will be taxable in the year of sale. Let’s assume (without considering property improvements or buying or selling costs) that you purchase a rental for $50,000 and then several years later sell it for $300,000. Over the period of time that it was a rental, you took $10,000 in depreciation deductions. Your tax basis in the property at the time of sale would be $40,000 (your cost of $50,000 less the $10,000 taken in depreciation). Thus, your gain would be $260,000 (the sales price of $300,000 less your tax basis of $40,000). The recaptured depreciation of $10,000 can be taxed as high as 25%, depending on your tax bracket and the balance of the gain ($220,000) is taxed at a maximum of 15%.
Real Estate Professional
If you qualify as a “real estate professional” (which requires the performance of substantial services in real property trades or businesses), your rental real estate activities are not automatically treated as passive, and so losses from those activities can be deducted against earned income, interest, dividends, etc., if you materially participate in the activities. Please call this office for additional details associated with this limited exception.
Renting Part of Property
If you rent part of your property, such as a room or a portion of the house, you must divide certain expenses between the part of the property used for rental purposes and the part of the property used for personal purposes, as though you actually had two separate pieces of property. You can deduct the expenses related to the part of the property used for rental purposes, such as home mortgage interest and real estate taxes, as rental expenses. You can also deduct as a rental expense a part of other expenses that normally are nondeductible personal expenses, such as utilities and home repairs (such as painting the outside of your house). You do not have to divide the expenses that belong only to the rental part of your property.
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