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    Splitting Rental Property after Divorce

    I have a client that was divorced last year. They filed MFJ in 2008. The divorce lawyer told her she could claim half the rent and claim half the expenses. Is this true, and if so, how do you handle the depreciation?

    #2
    Originally posted by Gary View Post
    I have a client that was divorced last year. They filed MFJ in 2008. The divorce lawyer told her she could claim half the rent and claim half the expenses. Is this true, and if so, how do you handle the depreciation?
    Most programs allow you to enter % of ownership. If you enter 50% the program will do the rest. Some of my older programs I had to reduce the assets in half for all to work.
    This post is for discussion purposes only and should be verified with other sources before actual use.

    Many times I post additional info on the post, Click on "message board" for updated content.

    Comment


      #3
      Divorcing/Splitting

      Which ex-spouse has custody of the building?

      And did they sign Form 8332 to allow the other ex-spouse to claim the depreciation??

      ROFLMAO




      BMK
      Burton M. Koss
      koss@usakoss.net

      ____________________________________
      The map is not the territory...
      and the instruction book is not the process.

      Comment


        #4
        Form 8332

        Form 8332 allows the non custodial parent to claim dependency. it has nothing to do with rental properties.

        Comment


          #5
          Form 8332

          Dude, that was a joke



          BMK
          Burton M. Koss
          koss@usakoss.net

          ____________________________________
          The map is not the territory...
          and the instruction book is not the process.

          Comment


            #6
            seriously now

            First thanksfor the laugh. At 5:50 AM I needed it.
            As 2008 was MFJ I assume the issue is 2009. If the house was still owned jointly by the husband and the wife then one person should prepare a Schedule E splitting the income and all deductions including depreciation 50-50 and each should report this on their return.

            Comment


              #7
              Rental income is reported by the taxpayer that received the income. If they both received the income (for example, a deposit into a joint checking account at the time), then they each report their share of the income. If they owned the rental property jointly, and they jointly paid the expenses (for example, a check written out of a joint checking account), then they can split the rental expenses and each deduct their half.

              It is possible for only one spouse to have the rental property in his or her name, and to have a checking account only in his or her name. If that is the case, only that spouse reports income and expenses.

              Comment


                #8
                Sorry

                Koss:

                Sorry for not getting the joke. Sometimes I'm a little dense.

                Thank you all for responding.

                Gary

                Comment


                  #9
                  Humor

                  No hard feelings.



                  Without my warped sense of humor, I would never make it through a tax season.

                  With that said, I suppose I do need to be a bit cautious.

                  Only a couple people have ever been banned from this message board by the administrators. The reasons were complex, and I never got the full picture. In large part, I think it was a lack of respect in their posts.

                  But I vaguely remember that one guy had developed a habit of occasionally posting fictitious stuff, with citations to IRC sections that did not actually exist, or references to "new legislation" that was completely bogus. The posts were very subtle, and the bogus ideas were just inside the limits of what could be real. People were genuinely confused, and couldn't tell when he was kidding around.

                  This certainly wasn't the only reason he was banned. And he wasn't doing it every day. But it was often enough that some folks saw it as a problem. I guess he was trying to use irony and humor to make a point somehow. But in this context, it was a bad idea. The stuff he was dreaming up was pretty far-fetched, but it wasn't totally inconceivable. Maybe he was trying to illustrate just how illogical and ridiculous the tax law sometimes is... that people couldn't tell what was fact and what was fiction. Perhaps his point was that one cannot rely too heavily on ordinary common sense or standard deductive reasoning when interpreting or applying the tax law. But he took it a little too far, I guess.

                  BMK
                  Burton M. Koss
                  koss@usakoss.net

                  ____________________________________
                  The map is not the territory...
                  and the instruction book is not the process.

                  Comment

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