Domain: tiger-web1.srvr.media3.us Tax question - Limitation on rental losses | Money Talk
Page 1
Page 1
Started By
Message
locked post

Tax question - Limitation on rental losses

Posted on 3/11/12 at 11:15 am
Posted by Htown Tiger
Houston
Member since Sep 2005
2329 posts
Posted on 3/11/12 at 11:15 am
I own rental property and every year I have been able to receive anywhere from $3k-$5k back at tax time recognizing my rental expenses, depreciation, etc. Well, since my wife went back to work in 2011, her income has now pushed us over the $150k mark and now I cannot recognize any losses?? This is crap.

Here is what Form 8582 states: "Generally, if your modified adjusted gross income is $150,000 or more, there is no special allowance."

Is there any way around this "generally" statement? I was really counting on this rebate. Our gross salary should have no bearing on me losing my arse in a rental property while the economy is in the toilet. This really sucks.
Posted by aaronb023
TeamBunt CEO
Member since Feb 2005
11774 posts
Posted on 3/11/12 at 1:58 pm to
are you or your wife in the real estate biz? agent, developer or anything?

if not you will probably just have to add it to your cost basis when you sell
This post was edited on 3/11/12 at 2:04 pm
Posted by C
Houston
Member since Dec 2007
28194 posts
Posted on 3/11/12 at 4:04 pm to
must be something new. I took it last year when i rented out my home.
Posted by LSU1018
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2007
7366 posts
Posted on 3/11/12 at 5:04 pm to
Don't you have to show a gain after a certain amount of years?
Posted by Dreamweaver
Member since Aug 2011
51 posts
Posted on 3/11/12 at 8:03 pm to
ianae, but unless you are in the real estate biz this is what i believe is considered a passive loss.

You don't really lose the deduction you are just not able to take it in the current year, you carry it over from year to year until you either have enough positive income from the property to use it or you sell the property.
Posted by Htown Tiger
Houston
Member since Sep 2005
2329 posts
Posted on 3/11/12 at 9:49 pm to
Yeah I dont think I pass the "real estate professional" test. Bummer. Thanks for the responses.
Posted by Bacchus
Tulsa
Member since Feb 2009
287 posts
Posted on 3/12/12 at 10:28 am to
Would filing married, but separately help? You could claim the losses on your own return and have income below $150k, and she'd likely get money back as well since her income wouldn't be taxed at the highest rate, but as if she made $30k or whatever. I've never filed seperately before, so I'm not entirely sure how you're able to split up expenses like this...but would it be worth looking into?
Posted by simonizer
no
Member since Oct 2008
1700 posts
Posted on 3/12/12 at 12:10 pm to
no.

MFS will be limited to 12500 per spouse. the phaseout begins at 50,000, and one spouse's passive loss cannot be offst by the other spouse's passive income.

This all assumes that the spouses lived apart for the entire year. If they did not, then the special allowance is zero.
Posted by aaronb023
TeamBunt CEO
Member since Feb 2005
11774 posts
Posted on 3/12/12 at 1:26 pm to
what are your long term plans with the property?
Posted by Htown Tiger
Houston
Member since Sep 2005
2329 posts
Posted on 3/12/12 at 8:28 pm to
Sell as the soon as possible- but considering it's underwater and in the market sucks where it's located, that might be 10 years.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on X, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookXInstagram