Posted: 25 Jul 2012 at 10:30 | IP Logged
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Hi Sandy,
The answers are as follows:
1. The repairs you did from July 10 till the end of year will be classified by the IRS as capital expenses. In other words you will need to add them to the basis of the property and recover them through depreciation as all these repairs are part of a general improvement of the property. As the property is a residential building, located within the USA, under MACRS you must depreciate it for 27.5, not for 39 years which is the recovery period for non-residential real property - office for example. Note that the value of your own labor must not be added to the basis. You may add all supplies, carrying charges, materials, etc. Furniture and appliances are depreciated separately under 200% DB method for a period of 5-7 years depending on the type of asset.
2. Your intention was to use the property as a vacation home (personal property). So it is important to properly determine basis on the date the property was first placed in service. It is the date the property was ready and offered for rent, no matter when it was actually rented out for the first time. Your basis for depreciation will be the lesser of your adjusted basis or the FMV of the property.
3. From that date onwards all expenses related to utilities, maintenance, repairs, supplies, taxes, mortgage interest, etc will be deducted currently (unless capital expenses). Same applies to travelling expenses, but only if you travelled away from your "tax home" overnight on business and to the extend they were connected to the production of income (for example, if you worked on the property, went to collect rent, etc). Refer to IRC 162(a)(2) and the regulations hereunder for more information about deductibility. Personal travel is not deductible; same applies to travelling expenses for investment purposes. Meals and Incidental expenses are 50% deductible. Again IRC 162(a)(2).
4. Report the gross rental income on Schedule E of your 1040 tax return (only in case you have rented out the property for more than 15 days during the year). You will be treated as actively participating in the production of income (passive activity loss limitation rules as long as you do some work, maintenance, managing decisions, collection of rent, etc), therefore your passive loss if any will be deductible up to $25k per year. You may use it to offset any other income you might have. The unallowed losses are carried forward to the next tax year and so on.
__________________ Chris
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