Table of Contents
1. Tax Deduction Basics for Landlords
How Landlords Are Taxed
How Income Tax Deductions Work
How Property Ownership Affects Taxes
The IRS and the Landlord
2. Landlord Tax Classifications
The Landlord Tax Categories
Business Owner Versus Investor
Are You Profit Motivated?
Real Estate Dealers
3. Deducting Your Operating Expenses
Requirements for Deducting Operating Expenses
Operating Expenses That Are Not Deductible
4. Repairs
Repair Versus Improvement
The General Plan of Improvement Rule: A Trap for the Unwary
How to Deduct Repairs
Tips for Maximizing Your Repair Deductions
5. Depreciation Basics
Depreciation: The Landlord's Best Tax Break
Understanding the Basics
How to Depreciate Buildings
Depreciating Land Improvements
Depreciating Personal Property
When You Sell Your Property
Tax Reporting and Record Keeping for Depreciation
6. Maximizing Your Depreciation Deductions
Determining the Value of Your Land and Buildings
Segmented Depreciation
7. Interest
Interest Landlords Can (and Can't) Deduct
Mortgage Interest
Other Interest Expenses
Points and Prepaid Interest
Interest on Construction Loans
Loans With Low or No Interest
Loans on Rental Property Used for Nonrental Purposes
Keeping Track of Borrowed Money
8. Start-Up Expenses
What Are Start-Up Expenses?
Determining Your Business Start Date
Avoiding the Start-Up Rule's Bite
How to Deduct Start-Up Expenses
If Your Business Doesn't Last 15 Years
If Your Business Never Begins
9. The Home Office Deduction
Qualifying for the Home Office Deduction
Calculating the HomeOffice Deduction
IRS Reporting Requirements
Audit-Proofing Your Home Office Deduction
Deducting an Outside Office
10. Car and Local Transportation Expenses
Deductible Local Transportation Expenses
The Standard Mileage Rate
The Actual Expense Method
Other Local Transportation Expenses
Reporting Transportation Expenses on Your Tax Return
11. Travel Expenses
What Are Travel Expenses?
Deductible Travel Expenses
How Much You Can Deduct
Maximizing Your Travel Deductions
12. Hiring Help
Deducting Payments to Workers
Employees Versus Independent Contractors
Tax Rules When Hiring Independent Contractors
Tax Rules for Employees
Hiring Your Family
Hiring a Resident Manager
13. Casualty and Theft Losses
What Is a Casualty?
Calculating a Casualty Loss Deduction
Disaster Area Losses
Casualty Gains
Tax Reporting and Record Keeping for Casualty Losses
14. Additional Deductions
Dues and Subscriptions
Education Expenses
Gifts
Insurance for Your Rental Activity
Legal and Professional Services
Meals and Entertainment
Taxes
Unpaid Rent
15. Vacation Homes
The Vacation Home Tax Morass
Regular Rental Property
Tax-Free Vacation Home
Vacation Home Used as Rental Property
Vacation Home Used as Residence
Calculating Personal and Rental Use
Converting Your Home to a Rental Property
16. Deducting Rental Losses
What Are Rental Losses?
Overview of the Passive Loss Rules
The $25,000 Offset
The Real Estate Professional Exemption
Rental Activities Not Subject to PAL Real Property Rental Rules
Vacation Homes
Deducting Suspended Passive Losses
Tax Reporting for Passive Rental Losses
Strategies for Dealing With the Passive Loss Rules
At-Risk Rules
How to Deduct Rental Losses
17. Record Keeping and Accounting
Record Keeping Made Simple
Accounting Methods
Tax Years
18. All About Schedule E
Who Must File Schedule E?
Filling Out Schedule E
Schedule E Example
19. Claiming Tax Deductions for Prior Years
Reasons for Amending Your Tax Return
Time Limits for Filing Amended Returns
How to Amend Your Return
How the IRS Processes Refund Claims
20. Help Beyond This Book
Secondary Sources of Tax Information
The Tax Law
Consulting a Tax Professional
Index
Read an Excerpt
IntroductionThe tax code is full of deductions for landlords. Before you can start taking advantage of these deductions, however, you need a basic understanding of how landlords pay taxes and how tax deductions work. This chapter gives you all the information you need to get started, including:
- how the IRS taxes landlords
- how tax deductions work
- how forms of property ownership affect landlord taxes, and
- IRS audits -- how they work and how to avoid them.
How Landlords Are TaxedWhen you own residential rental property, you are required to pay the following taxes:
- income taxes on rental income and profits from property sales
- property taxes, and
- Social Security and Medicare taxes (for some landlords).
Let's look at each type of tax.
Income Taxes on Rental IncomeYou must pay federal income taxes on the income (rent and other money) you receive from your rental property each year. When you file your yearly tax return, you add your rental income to your other income for the year, such as salary income from a job, interest on savings, and investment income.
This book covers rental property deductions for federal income taxes. However, 43 states also have income taxes. State income tax laws generally track federal tax law, but there are some exceptions. The states without income taxes are Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. For details on your state's income tax law, visit your state tax agency's website, or contact your local state tax office. You can find links to all 50state tax agency websites at www.taxsites.com/state.html.
Income Taxes on Profits When You Sell Your PropertyWhen you sell your property, any profit you earn is added to your income for the year and is subject to taxation. Profits from the sale of rental property owned for more than one year are taxed at capital gains rates. These rates are generally lower than income tax rates -- usually 20% lower, except for taxpayers in the lowest tax brackets. (See Chapter 5 for an example of the tax effects of a rental property sale.)
However, you may be able to defer tax on your profits -- perhaps indefinitely -- by selling your property through a like-kind exchange (also called a section 1031 exchange or tax-free exchange). This kind of exchange involves swapping your property for similar property owned by someone else. These property swaps are subject to complex tax rules that are beyond the scope of this book, since they have nothing to do with income tax deductions. For more information, see IRS Publication 544,
Sales and Other Disposition of Assets.
Social Security and Medicare TaxesEveryone who works as an employee or who owns his or her own business must pay Social Security and Medicare taxes. These are two separate taxes:
- a 12.4% social security tax, up to an annual income ceiling or cap -- in 2006, the cap was $94,200 per year, and
- a 2.9% Medicare tax on all employee wages or self-employment profits.
Together, these amount to a 15.3% tax, up to the annual Social Security tax ceiling. Employees pay half of these taxes themselves and their employers pay the other half. Self-employed people must pay it all themselves.
You may have to pay (and withhold) Social Security and Medicare taxes if you hire employees to work in your rental activity -- for example, if you hire a resident manager. The employer's share of such taxes is a deductible expense. (See Chapter 12.)
Fortunately, the income you earn from your rental property is not subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes. (IRC sec. 1402(a)(1).) This is so even if your rental activities constitute a business for tax purposes. (See Chapter 2.) This is one of the great tax benefits of owning rental property. A person who owns a hot dog stand must pay the 15.3% self-employment tax on his or her annual profits, whereas a person who owns a rental house or other real estate need pay no self-employment taxes on his or her rental income.
There is one exception to this rule, which will not apply to many readers of this book: you must pay Social Security and Medicare taxes on rental income if you provide "substantial services" along with the rental. This exception would apply, for example, if you owned a boardinghouse, hotel, or motel and provided maid service, room service, or concierge services. The exception does not apply to services commonly provided for residential rentals, such as repairs, cleaning, maintenance, trash removal, elevators, security, or cable television.
In addition, if you qualify as a real estate dealer, you'll have to pay Social Security and Medicare taxes on your annual profits. (See Chapter 2.)
Property TaxesProperty owners in all states pay property taxes imposed by cities, counties, and other local governments. They are a tax on the value of your rental property. Property taxes are not covered in this book.
How Income Tax Deductions WorkThe tax law recognizes that you must spend money on your rental properties for such things as mortgage interest, repairs, maintenance, and many other expenses. The law allows you to subtract these expenses, plus an amount for the depreciation of your property, from your effective gross rental income (all the money actually earned from the property) to determine your "taxable income." You pay income tax only on your taxable income, if any. Expenses you can deduct from your income are called tax deductions or tax write-offs. These deductions are what this book is about.
Although some tax deduction calculations can get a bit complicated, the basic math is simple: The entire tax regimen for rental real estate can be reduced to the following simple equation:
Effective Gross Rental Income
minus Operating Expenses (including mortgage interest)
minus Depreciation and Amortization Expenses= Taxable Income
(People who analyze real estate investments don't include mortgage interest as a real estate operating expense, but it is an operating expense for tax purposes.)
EXAMPLE: Karen owns a rental house. This year, her effective gross rental income (all the income she actually earned from the property) was $10,000. She doesn't pay tax on the entire $10,000 because she had the following expenses -- $5,000 in mortgage interest, $1,000 for other operating expenses, and $2,000 for depreciation. She gets to deduct these as outlined in the above equation: