No. It would not be considered personal residence. He was "allowed" the depreciation at the time it was rental property. I assume you are referring to the suspension of the loss due to his AGI. Some of that loss might have been depreciation, or it could have consisted of other expenses as well. It was suspended, not disallowed, and he is now able to deduct all of it due to disposition. Note that he is not able to deduct the loss based on the original purchase price of the property when it was a residence.
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I am a little nervous with these numbers
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Originally posted by AZ-Tax View PostWhat does everyone think I should do with the 1099-A, should I just disregard it? Thanks a bunch to all of you for contributing to this. This became one challanging tax return.Last edited by Burke; 04-26-2012, 12:00 PM.
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Agreed. And if you are using Proseries, the worksheets are not made for this type of issue (personal to rental & foreclosure) and will generate all sorts of wrong answers if you rely on the software. Take this from someone that made a bit of money walking two Proseries users through a few clients with about 4 foreclosures/short sales between the two of them. I knew what the answers were and could NOT get the **** program to generate them.
Those worksheets took what should have been a half hour bit of computation into several hours of consultation revenue.
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