situation: parents own a two family house and rent the apartment to son and daughter-in-law for 600\month. the FMV of the rental property is 1000\month. Since this is a below FMV rental it is considered personal use property. Therefore parents must pick up the rental income but cannot deduct any expenses attributalble to the rental period since they are considered personal expenses. Questions -what about the exclusion of gain on the sale of the property. Can the entire gain on the sale of the house be excluded ( assuming it meets all the other criteria) or is the sale allocated between the parent's apartment and the son's apartment and gain on the son's apartment subject to tax ? Does the fact that the son's apartment is considered personal use property change the tax treament?
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personal use rental property
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Originally posted by theresa dSince this is a below FMV rental it is considered personal use property. Therefore parents must pick up the rental income but cannot deduct any expenses attributalble to the rental period since they are considered personal expenses.
Is the apartment a separate building? Or is it attached to the main house? If it's a separate building, AND it's treated as a rental property, then if the entire property is sold, I believe an allocation of the SP will need to be made, and only the gain on the main home will be eligible for the §121 exclusion. In all other cases, no allocation will need to be made, but any depreciation taken on the apartment will be taxable.Roland Slugg
"I do what I can."
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Personal Use Rental Property
The way I read the facts, parents have their own portion of personal residence. The other half of residence is rental property.
Since rental property is rented out at 40% below FMV, then all rental income is picked up, but except for real estate taxes and mortgage interest (if any), all expenses are given a 40% discount for tax deduction purposes.
Upon sale of residence, the §121 exclusion applies only to parents' portion of residence, capital gain (subject ot any depreciation recapture) on the portion rented out to son.Uncle Sam, CPA, EA. ARA, NTPI Fellow
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Not for Profit
I agree with Uncle Sam. May be in view of the rental income being so far below the market, one could construe it as a Not for Profit Activity (assuming when child moves out it will not longer be rented). In that case, other than interest and taxes, any expenses up to the amount of income would go as Miscellaneous on Sch A.
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It's about IRC section 280A, "Disallowance of certain expenses..."
Below fair market value rental only disallows the expenses. It doesn't make the rental portion a principle residence for the 121 exclusion. It's still rental, forget about pretending it's been rented for only two weeks and you don't have to report the rental income.
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