I have a new client who owns three rental properties and never claimed any depreciation on them for the past 10 years. After explaining to him the implications of not claiming the depreciation, he agreed for me to fix it. I was thinking of preparing Form 3115 and calculating the 481 (a) adjustment. In this case he will have a negative 481 (a) adjustment. I am not sure if I can take the entire adjustment in current year or over a four year period? If I take the entire adjustment in the current year it will be over $130,000 and will make his taxable income zero and will get him a big refund. Will this cause any issues with IRS? Can anyone suggest me how the missed depreciation on rental property be handled? Has anyone came across this kind of issue? Thanks
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
481 (a) Adjustment
Collapse
X
-
I had only done a large 481 adjustment and we filed paper because of the supplemental documents (old schedule E copies, etc.) to prove that depreciation was never claimed because the software taxpayer was using was not doing the calculation correctly. You also need to write the explanation letter. Good luck.Taxes after all are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society. - FDR
-
Yes - I had a very similar situation of a client who had 3 rental properties (3 different coop units) where until he came to me never picked up depreciation for those units.
I completed Form 3115, explained the situation in detail, prepared a schedule of missed depreciation for each unit by year, then picked up a 481(a) adjustment (negative) on the year discovered, never heard anything from IRS. That goes back at this point - about 6 years ago.Uncle Sam, CPA, EA. ARA, NTPI Fellow
Comment
-
A good, inexpensive resource is Lisa Ihm's booklet from Brass Tax: Tax:https://brasstax.com/shop?olsPage=products&page=2
Or, start with her free worksheet: https://brasstax.com/practice-aids#9...e-69f1d56b6507
Comment
Disclaimer
Collapse
This message board allows participants to freely exchange ideas and opinions on areas concerning taxes. The comments posted are the opinions of participants and not that of Tax Materials, Inc. We make no claim as to the accuracy of the information and will not be held liable for any damages caused by using such information. Tax Materials, Inc. reserves the right to delete or modify inappropriate postings.
Comment