How does Depreciation Recapture affect taxes when selling investment property?
Qualifying for Real Estate Professional status can materially change how rental real estate income and losses are treated for federal tax purposes. For many investors, the main advantage is not that it creates a new deduction, but that it may allow existing real estate deductions to be used more effectively.
Under the passive activity loss rules, rental real estate is generally treated as passive, even when the taxpayer is involved. The IRS provides an exception when a taxpayer qualifies as a Real Estate Professional and materially participates in the rental activity.
To qualify as a Real Estate Professional for federal tax purposes, a taxpayer generally must satisfy the following:
Phantom Income can arise when taxable income appears without matching cash flow, making accurate classification and planning especially important.
The Impact of Rising and Falling Interest Rates can also change the economics of real estate ownership, which makes year-by-year tax planning more important rather than something to clean up after December 31.
The bottom line: the tax advantage is the ability to turn rental real estate from “tax losses that sit on the shelf” into deductions that may be usable now. The catch is that the Real Estate Professional IRS standards are fact-specific and documentation-heavy.
For more than four decades, Bennett Thrasher has provided businesses and individuals with strategic business guidance and solutions through professional tax, audit, advisory, and business process outsourcing services. Contact Rick Suid, Partner in Bennett Thrasher’s Financial Reporting & Assurance practice with extensive Real Estate industry experience, or call us at 770.396.2200.
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