If taxpayer had type of mortgage loan that allowed for payments that did not cover the full amount of interest, thus the unpaid interest rolled into loan, would all of the interest be considered for business purposes, thus 100% deductible? Or would the portion of the loan that applied to the unpaid interest be considered personal; thus need to be prorated between personal and business expense? How are other tax preparers handling? In California, I am seeing many mortgages with this situation.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Mortgage Interest on Rental
Collapse
X
-
Rentals
I have had a few of them on rental units, and the statements have given me the current interest paid and the deferred interest paid. On my t/p scenario, it made little difference as all of the rental losses were disallowed due to the income factor, so all passive losses were carried forward to be dealt with on disposition.
I only reported the amount on Schedule E from the form 1098 that was current interest paid with the monthly payments and did not use the mortgage interest that was deferred.
On the closing statement when they sold the property, I picked up the deferred interest.
Again, mine t/p that I am referring to, did not ihave an impact on the immediate return I was filing.
For a taxpayer that was only a Schedule A, based on personal residence, I have treated much the same, and only deducted the immediate interest that was paid in the year, not the deferred interest that has been added to the loan. I have picked up the deferred interest at the time of sale.
In research I have found very little to address this issue, so I really don't know if I am right or wrong,
Sandy
Comment
-
Mortgage Interest - Rental
My question is more about determining if the negative interest that is added to the loan is considered personal rather than business. If that is the case than the interest shown on the 1098 would need to be prorated based on personal vs. business. If it is considered business, than no problem and I am in agreement with Sandy. But, if considered personal????????
Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment