My client was renting a condo at FMV to his mother for many years. We reported all rent and deductions. The mom died in June 2008. After her death the condo was not rented and was only used by my client when there trying to sell the condo. On the one hand there was no personal use so I think maybe we continue to take deductions but on the other hand the condo was not available for rent so I think deductions are not allowed. So on the 2008 return do I treat it as a rental property for 6 months, or a 12 month rental with no rent after June?
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I think this sort of situation goes by the intent of the taxpayer. After the mother died, did he intend to rent the property again? If he intended to rent it but did not because repairs etc were being made, I would contiune to take deductions for the entire year.
But, if the t/p did not intend to rent the property again, then I would stop all deductions after June.You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be misquoted, then used against you.
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Originally posted by Kram BergGold View PostMy client was renting a condo at FMV to his mother for many years. We reported all rent and deductions. The mom died in June 2008. After her death the condo was not rented and was only used by my client when there trying to sell the condo. On the one hand there was no personal use so I think maybe we continue to take deductions but on the other hand the condo was not available for rent so I think deductions are not allowed. So on the 2008 return do I treat it as a rental property for 6 months, or a 12 month rental with no rent after June?This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.
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Assuming your client did not use the condo for personal purposes after his mother’s death, and his intent is to sell the condo, I would convert it from rental to investment property. Thus, all expenses after the date he takes it off the rental market become Schedule A investment expenses, subject to the 2% AGI limitation.
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