Tax
Traps for New Real Estate Investors
By: Stephen L. Nelson, CPA
Perhaps one shouldn’t be surprised that new real estate investors
fall into the same tax traps again and again. Real
estate burdens investors—especially new investors—with
some tricky tax accounting.
But just
because some other newbie makes these mistakes, that doesn’t
mean you need to. You just need to know where the traps are so you
avoid them. And here are the biggest real estate tax traps you don’t
want to fall into:
Tax
Trap 1: Passive Loss Limitation
On paper
at least, real estate often loses money. Even if the rent pays the
mortgage and the operating expenses, the books still show a loss because
you get to write off a portion of the purchase price through depreciation
each year.
If a
rental house that cost $275,000 breaks even on cash flow, for example,
you might also get a $10,000 annual depreciation deduction. If your
marginal tax rate is 28%, that depreciation should save you $2800
annually.
Sounds
sweet, right? Well, it is—or should be. Except that the U.S.
Congress labeled real estate investment a passive activity and said
that, except in a couple of special circumstances, you can’t
write off passive activity deductions unless overall you show positive
passive income.
This
passive loss limitation rule means that many real estate investors
don’t get to use tax saving deductions from real estate—or
least not annually.
Two loopholes,
courtesy of Congress, do exist that let you write off deductions from
real estate even if overall you show a loss from real estate investing.
If you’re an active real estate investor with adjusted gross
income below $100,000, you can write off up to $25,000 of passive
losses annually. (If your income is between $100,000 and $150,000,
you get to write off a percentage of the $25,000. Ask your tax advisor
for the details.)
Here’s
the second loophole: If you’re a real estate professional, Congress
says the passive loss limitation rule doesn’t apply to you when
it comes to real estate. A real estate professional, by the way, is
not someone who’s licensed as an agent or broker. The law instead
creates a time-based test: A real estate professional is someone who
spends at least 750 hours a year and more than 50% of their time working
as a real estate agent, broker, property manager or developer.
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Tax
Trap 2: Capitalization of Improvements
The next
mistake that new real estate investors make? Thinking they can write
off the amounts they spend to improve the property. Sometimes you
can. Often you can’t.
Here’s
why: Any expenditure that increases the life of the property or improves
its utility needs to be depreciated over the next 27.5 years (if the
property is residential) or over 39 years (if the property is nonresidential).
You can’t, therefore, write off the money spent improving or
renovating a house—except through depreciation.
I’ve
seen new real estate investors in tears about this wrinkle. Some investor
draws, say, $20,000 from his IRA or 401(k) to fix up some rental.
He figures he’ll be able to write off the $20,000 as a tax deduction
in the year improvements are made.
No way.
Instead, he’ll have to write off the $20,000 at the rate of
a few hundred bucks a year over the next three or four decades.
The trick
with renovation—if you want to call it that—is to keep
the property well maintained as you go. Repainting, new carpeting,
general repairs—these items should all be all deductions in
the year of expenditure (er, subject to the passive loss limitation
rule discussed as the first tax trap.)
Tax
Trap 3: Missing the Section 121 Exclusion
Here’s
the final tear-jerker. And I see it several times a year. Someone
decides that rather than sell their principal residence when they
“move up” to a larger new home, they’re going to
turn the original home into a rental.
This
is a disastrous decision most of the time because of Section 121 of
the Internal Revenue Code . Section 121 says that if you’ve
owned a home and lived in a home for at least two of the last years,
you won’t pay any tax on the first $250,000 of gain on the sale
($500,000 of gain in the case of someone who’s married and filing
a joint return).
By converting
a principal residence to a rental property, you turn tax-free gain
into taxable gain if you don’t sell the property in the first
three years.
Two quick
notes about goofing up the Section 121 exclusion. If you don’t
have appreciation in your old principal residence, you’re not
losing any Section 121 benefit by converting to a rental.
Second,
if you do have a lot of appreciation in your old principal residence
and want to use that equity to acquire a rental property, consider
this: Sell the old principal residence when you move out so the gain
is excluded from taxable income. Then use the tax-free proceeds to
purchase another rental—perhaps even the house next door.
Article Source: Incorporation & LLC formation expert Stephen L.
Nelson CPA has written more than 150 books. Formerly an adjunct tax
professor at Golden Gate University, Nelson is also the author of
the bestselling book Quicken for Dummies www.llcsexplained.com.
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