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    No Income Rental

    I have a client whose one rental house was put in service in late 2004. The tenant vandlized it and had to be evicted. For the most of 2005, until December, the taxpayer made repairs to make the property again rentable. There is no rental income for 2005.
    Would this be treated in the same manner as if it did have income or does it have to be rentable as when it's first put in service? Thanks for your time. HJ

    #2
    This sounds like a temporary repair condition or "idle property' and the status of the property does not change, therefore it is still classified as residential rental property for 2005 with depreciation & expenses and just no income on 1040 Sch-E. However, losses on rental property are passive activities and may be limited and or suspended.
    Originally posted by Pub 946, How to Depreciate Property
    Idle Property
    Continue to claim a deduction for depreciation on property
    used in your business or for the production of income even
    if it is temporarily idle. For example, if you stop using a
    machine because there is a temporary lack of a market for
    a product made with that machine, continue to deduct
    depreciation on the machine.

    Comment


      #3
      Sensible Limits

      I have done as Ol' Jack suggested: rental loss with zero revenue, farm loss with zero revenue, etc. At some point, however, I have to make a decision whether the taxpayer is serious about conducting business.

      Client bought 35 acres adjacent to his house. Also bought a tractor, bush-hog, fencing material, etc. Wanted to deduct depreciation, land taxes, operating costs, etc. on a schedule F. Can he do this with zero sales? SURE HE CAN!! and so we did. However, in the second year, he never bought cattle, never plowed the earth, never did anything except mow his 35 acre yard. In year 2, I put a screaming halt to a second consecutive year of deductions with no revenue.

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        #4
        A farmer is "presumed" to be farming for profit with losses allowed if he shows a profit 3 years out of 5 years. Therefore farm losses for at least 2 years should be allowed without question as to is it a farming loss or a hobby loss. Of course if the taxpayer does not appear to be farming he should not try to claim farming losses.

        Originally posted by page 27, Pub 225, Farmers Guide
        Presumption of profit. Your farming or other
        activity is presumed carried on for profit if it
        produced a profit in at least 3 of the last 5 tax
        years, including the current year. Activities that consist
        primarily of breeding, training, showing,
        or racing horses are presumed carried on for profit
        if they produced a profit in at least 2 of the last
        7 tax years, including the current year. The
        activity must be substantially the same for each year
        within this period. You have a profit when the
        gross income from an activity is more than the
        deductions for it. If a taxpayer dies before the end of the
        5-year (or 7-year) period, the period ends on the
        date of the taxpayer’s death.
        If your business or investment activity
        passes this 3- (or 2-) years-of-profit test,
        presume it is carried on for profit. This means the
        limits discussed here do not apply. You can take
        all your business deductions from the activity on
        Schedule F, even for the years that you have a
        loss. You can rely on this presumption in every
        case, unless the IRS shows it is not valid.
        If you fail the 3 or 2 years-of-profit test,
        you may still be considered operating your farm
        for profit by considering the factors listed earlier.

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