Comrades, I am about to embarked upon my first tax return involving land sale. I am not 100 certain about the forms that should be utilized. To my knowledge, it was just vacant land without any dwelling sitting on it. But, in case that when the client does come to the tax office, do I put the land sale on a Sch-D, and if it is rental property, shouldn't it go on a 4797? Any guidance regarding this land sale will be most gracious. Thanks.
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Land Sale
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Vacant Land
If it was vacant land, it probably wasn't rental property.
In theory, it could be. It might have been rented as farmland, but then it's not considered vacant land. It could have been rented for some sort of storage (e.g., someone needs a place to park their boat or RV). Or maybe it was rented to a bunch of hippies for a music festival...
If it was vacant land, then it was probably simply held as an investment.
So it would go on Schedule D, and Form 4797 would not be used.
The easy part is: No depreciation!
There's other possibilities. If your client is a professional real estate dealer, or a builder or developer, then the vacant land might have been used in a trade or business, and then you would need Form 4797. Other complex issues could arise if he was harvesting timber, or leasing it to someone who was grazing cattle, etc.
That's all pretty fringe stuff. It was probably just an investment.
It may be one of the easiest entries on Schedule D you ever have.
BMKBurton M. Koss
koss@usakoss.net
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The map is not the territory...
and the instruction book is not the process.
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Originally posted by Koss View PostThere's other possibilities. If your client is a professional real estate dealer, or a builder or developer, then the vacant land might have been used in a trade or business, and then you would need Form 4797. BMK
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Another potential complication is that if the taxpayer held it as investment property he may have elected to capitalize carrying costs such as taxes, insurance and interest.In other words, a democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.
Alexis de Tocqueville
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