Client’s home is destroyed by fire. Insurance pays to rebuild house, plus buy new furnishings. No casualty loss since insurance pays for everything. No gain on the insurance reimbursements since nothing exceeds basis and replacement property is purchased within the time limit.
Fine. No problem.
Now the client wants to deduct the actual sales tax paid on Schedule A, which exceeds the state income tax paid, and the sales tax using the tables. Most of the sales tax was paid using insurance proceeds due to the casualty.
My first impression is that it is not deductible since it is tax free money (the insurance proceeds) being used to purchase these items. However, The Tax Book page 4-21 explains how under a business casualty, you get a double deduction – the cost of repairs plus the casualty loss – when there are no insurance proceeds. Assuming you had insurance proceeds, you would lose the casualty loss deduction but still get the cost of repairs.
Wouldn’t the sales tax deduction for personal property replaced in a casualty work on the same principal? You deduct the sales tax paid and reduce basis in the replacement property accordingly?
Fine. No problem.
Now the client wants to deduct the actual sales tax paid on Schedule A, which exceeds the state income tax paid, and the sales tax using the tables. Most of the sales tax was paid using insurance proceeds due to the casualty.
My first impression is that it is not deductible since it is tax free money (the insurance proceeds) being used to purchase these items. However, The Tax Book page 4-21 explains how under a business casualty, you get a double deduction – the cost of repairs plus the casualty loss – when there are no insurance proceeds. Assuming you had insurance proceeds, you would lose the casualty loss deduction but still get the cost of repairs.
Wouldn’t the sales tax deduction for personal property replaced in a casualty work on the same principal? You deduct the sales tax paid and reduce basis in the replacement property accordingly?
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