Category: <span>Rental</span>

Defining “Real Estate Investor” and “Real Estate Dealer”

Defining “Real Estate Investor” and “Real Estate Dealer”

Defining “Real Estate Investor” and “Real Estate Dealer” The first good news is that you can be both real estate investor and real estate dealer with respect to your real estate portfolio. The next good news is that you are in control, and by knowing just a few rules...
Drive Time Increases Odds of Deducting Rental Property Losses

Drive Time Increases Odds of Deducting Rental Property Losses

Drive Time Increases Odds of Deducting Rental Property Losses Your rental properties provide tax shelter when you can deduct your losses against your other income. One step to deducting the losses is to pass the tax code’s 750-hour test. And one step to finding the...
Does Your Rental Qualify for a 199A Deduction?

Does Your Rental Qualify for a 199A Deduction?

Does Your Rental Qualify for a 199A Deduction? The IRS, in its new proposed Section 199A regulations, defines when a rental property qualifies for the 20 percent tax deduction under new tax code Section 199A. One part of the good news on this clarification is that it...
Tax Time Bomb: Passive Foreign Investment Companies

Tax Time Bomb: Passive Foreign Investment Companies

Tax Time Bomb: Passive Foreign Investment Companies Passive foreign investment companies, or PFICs, are subject to some of the most complex provisions of the tax law. You may own one and not even know it. A passive foreign investment company is any foreign corporation...
How Cost Segregation Can Turn Your Rental into a Cash Cow

How Cost Segregation Can Turn Your Rental into a Cash Cow

How Cost Segregation Can Turn Your Rental into a Cash Cow Cost segregation breaks your real property into its components, some of which you can depreciate much faster than the typical 27.5 years for a residential rental or 39 years for nonresidential real estate....
Will Renting Your Home Destroy Your $250,000 Exclusion?

Will Renting Your Home Destroy Your $250,000 Exclusion?

Will Renting Your Home Destroy Your $250,000 Exclusion? The days when you could convert your rental property or vacation home to a principal residence and then use the full $250,000/$500,000 home-sale exclusion to avoid taxes are gone. Here’s how the $250,000/$500,000...