The standard deduction is the standard deduction. No effect. No adjustments are ever made.
Reg. Sec. 1.266-1 basically says if something is deductible, which personal residence RE taxes and mortgage interest are, then it can be capitalized if the taxpayer elects.
Really, the regulation says anything goes because under most cases it is better to deduct than to capitalize. But in those rare exceptions where the taxpayer benefits by capitalizing the costs, the regulation allows it. I think in most of your personal residence cases, electing to capitalize even when the standard deduction is higher will do little good when you consider the Section 121 exclusion on the sale of the house. That is probably why there is very little written or guidance provided on the subject.
Reg. Sec. 1.266-1 basically says if something is deductible, which personal residence RE taxes and mortgage interest are, then it can be capitalized if the taxpayer elects.
Really, the regulation says anything goes because under most cases it is better to deduct than to capitalize. But in those rare exceptions where the taxpayer benefits by capitalizing the costs, the regulation allows it. I think in most of your personal residence cases, electing to capitalize even when the standard deduction is higher will do little good when you consider the Section 121 exclusion on the sale of the house. That is probably why there is very little written or guidance provided on the subject.
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