Conversion of Personal Real Estate to Rental Property?
If a house’s Hοnеѕt Market Value іѕ less thаn finance due, аnd thе taxpayer wаntѕ tο convert thе property tο rental property, whаt аrе thе tax implications οf converting?
Thе property ѕtаrtѕ аѕ thе principal residence, bυt іf converted wіll nο longer bе residence.
If the debt on the property is acquisition debt, meaning it was incurred to buy, build, or improve the property, then the interest on the debt is fully deductible as a rental expense. If there is nonacquisition debt on the property, that interest is not deductible as a rental expense. Even though some or all of that interest may have been deductible on a principal residence, it will be disallowed as a business deduction. This is right whether or not the debt on the property is more than the FMV of the property.
You will depreciate the property according to the lesser of its basis or its FMV on the date of the conversion. This is unrelated to the amount of debt on the property.
The principal come forth when converting from confidential residence to rental is your basis in the property for depreciation purposes. The amount of the outstanding finance is beside the point. You must depreciate rental property in view of the fact that the depreciation is subject to recapture at sale time even if you don’t take it while you hold the property for rental.
To determine the basis you need numerous pieces of data:
1. Your original basis in the property.
2. The dollar amount of any improvements made while you occupied it as your residence.
3. The honest market value of the property when you converted it to rental use.
4. The value of the land both when you bought the property and when you converted it to rental use.
For items 1 and 2 your records will be enough. Items 3 and 4 should be backed up with qualified appraisals by a licensed real estate appraiser to avoid any hassles with the IRS down the road. The IRS may not inquiry your depreciation deductions year in and year out but they can still challenge what should have been *allowable* depreciation 20 years down the road when you sell. Having weak proof of your spot at that time could be catastrophically expensive for you! “Point in Time” appraisals are always risky and the older the point in time, the hazier they get.
Your basis for depreciation once you convert it is the lower of the adjusted basis (items 1 and 2) or the honest market value when you converted it to rental use. You then deduct the lesser land value (at buy time or conversion time) from this figure to get the basis for depreciating it as a rental in view of the fact that you cannot depreciate land.
Once you have your depreciable value you depreciate it on a straight-line basis for a 27.5 year term.
Going forward you offset your rental income with rental expenses including finance interest, depreciation, property taxes, repairs and maintenance, utilities, rental agent commissions, property management fees, etc.
Note that finance interest is limited to the finance that you took out to buy the property or make improvements to it. If you have any finance debt that was used to cash out justice for other purposes you cannot use that against rental income (but may be able to use it on Schedule A).
Deleting answer.
Poster is now asking so many questions this is clearly homework.