My client purchased a home to be used as an "Adult Family Home", ie, he and his wife provide housing and services for up to 6 elderly adults who live there in this home with them.
He paid $350,000 for the home, which he financed, has normal costs for maintaining the home, ie mortgage payments, taxes, utilities, repairs.....also has direct costs associated with caring for the elderly adults, ie food, transportation, supplies and the like.
2005 was the first year, bought the facility/home in July 2005. He and his wife moved out of their old home, which they left vacant, and moved into this new "Adult Family Home" to care for the adults, maintain the property and operate this activity.
They recieved a 1099 from the State dept of social and health services for 2005 in the amount of $23000. The client states this is the entire source of the income from the activity because the state pays for all the patients and none of them are direct private pay.
The client was told by "someone who knows about adult family homes" that he can exclude from income the $23000 because of a special exclusion rule that allows you to do so when you care for 5 or less adults. (I remember seeing something about this in Quickfinder/TaxBook but now I can't seem to find it)
Assuming that is true (where is this in TaxBook), are we required to exclude it?
It seems very obvious that this is a losing business bigtime....ie, even when you count the $23000 of income, when you deduct all of his operating expenses, plus interest, taxes, depreciation on the activity you have a big loss.
He still has his old home and will probably move back into his old home and hire employees to run the adult family home.
He has signifigant income from other sources and thus a loss from the operation of the "Adult Family Home" would aide him an his 2005 tax return.
Am I missing something?..I am assuming that if I exclude the income the I can't deduct any of the expenses, except of course the interest and real estate taxes on this as his new primary home.....is this wrong?
Help!
He paid $350,000 for the home, which he financed, has normal costs for maintaining the home, ie mortgage payments, taxes, utilities, repairs.....also has direct costs associated with caring for the elderly adults, ie food, transportation, supplies and the like.
2005 was the first year, bought the facility/home in July 2005. He and his wife moved out of their old home, which they left vacant, and moved into this new "Adult Family Home" to care for the adults, maintain the property and operate this activity.
They recieved a 1099 from the State dept of social and health services for 2005 in the amount of $23000. The client states this is the entire source of the income from the activity because the state pays for all the patients and none of them are direct private pay.
The client was told by "someone who knows about adult family homes" that he can exclude from income the $23000 because of a special exclusion rule that allows you to do so when you care for 5 or less adults. (I remember seeing something about this in Quickfinder/TaxBook but now I can't seem to find it)
Assuming that is true (where is this in TaxBook), are we required to exclude it?
It seems very obvious that this is a losing business bigtime....ie, even when you count the $23000 of income, when you deduct all of his operating expenses, plus interest, taxes, depreciation on the activity you have a big loss.
He still has his old home and will probably move back into his old home and hire employees to run the adult family home.
He has signifigant income from other sources and thus a loss from the operation of the "Adult Family Home" would aide him an his 2005 tax return.
Am I missing something?..I am assuming that if I exclude the income the I can't deduct any of the expenses, except of course the interest and real estate taxes on this as his new primary home.....is this wrong?
Help!
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