I just have to take a minute and say again how much I appreciate this professional board.
I had questions about abandoned rental property and did a search here. The answer was very clear and concise, and got a bigger refund for my client.
Thank you thank you thank you....
My question was whether or not this was a business loss. A December 2007 thread resulted in this offering:
(quote)
Default Natp
I found this Q & A on the NATP website:
Q: I received a Form 1099-A, Acquisition or Abandonment of Property. What do I do with it?
A: Receipt of Form 1099-A means you owed a lender some money and they have taken the identified property in satisfaction of some or all of the debt. For tax purposes, you are deemed to have “sold” the property to the lender and should report the “sale” according to the normal rules (Form 4797 for business or rental property, Schedule D for personal use property, etc.). You may have a taxable gain, or if business use property, a deductible loss.
To determine the “sales price”, you must look at Box 5 of the Form 1099-A. If Box 5 is marked “Yes”, you are personally liable for the debt and your “sale price” is the smaller of Box 2, Debt Outstanding”, or Box 4, Fair Market Value of the property taken. If Box 4 is the smaller amount, you still owe the difference between Box 2 and Box 4. You will eventually have to pay this difference unless it is later forgiven (which triggers debt forgiveness income).
If Box 5 of Form 1099-A is marked “No”, you are not personally liable for the debt and your “sale price” is the amount shown in Box 2, Debt Outstanding. Any amount in Box 4 is ignored.
(quote ends)
I had questions about abandoned rental property and did a search here. The answer was very clear and concise, and got a bigger refund for my client.
Thank you thank you thank you....
My question was whether or not this was a business loss. A December 2007 thread resulted in this offering:
(quote)
Default Natp
I found this Q & A on the NATP website:
Q: I received a Form 1099-A, Acquisition or Abandonment of Property. What do I do with it?
A: Receipt of Form 1099-A means you owed a lender some money and they have taken the identified property in satisfaction of some or all of the debt. For tax purposes, you are deemed to have “sold” the property to the lender and should report the “sale” according to the normal rules (Form 4797 for business or rental property, Schedule D for personal use property, etc.). You may have a taxable gain, or if business use property, a deductible loss.
To determine the “sales price”, you must look at Box 5 of the Form 1099-A. If Box 5 is marked “Yes”, you are personally liable for the debt and your “sale price” is the smaller of Box 2, Debt Outstanding”, or Box 4, Fair Market Value of the property taken. If Box 4 is the smaller amount, you still owe the difference between Box 2 and Box 4. You will eventually have to pay this difference unless it is later forgiven (which triggers debt forgiveness income).
If Box 5 of Form 1099-A is marked “No”, you are not personally liable for the debt and your “sale price” is the amount shown in Box 2, Debt Outstanding. Any amount in Box 4 is ignored.
(quote ends)
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