KrisD15
Expert Alumni

Business & farm

The way I understand this is

your mom had a rental

she passed and you reported that the rental was converted to personal use on her return

You inherited the property and continued the rental until Oct 2023

You sold the property in 2024 

 

Set up the rental in your TurboTax program

On the "Tell Us More About This Rental Asset" screen select 

I purchased this asset

The item was sold, retired, stolen, destroyed, disposed of, converted to personal use..."

Date it was retired from rental

"Yes, I've always used this item 100% of the time for business"

 

Continue

 

Select YES for the "Special Handling Required?" screen since you will not report the sale until you do your 2024 tax year return. 

 

DONE 

 

Go back to Rental Income and claim the rent you received for 2023.

Go back to rental Expenses and claim the expenses while it was an active rental.

You will also have a small amount of depreciation for 2023.

 

When you do your 2024 tax year return, you will report the sale of this property under 

Less Common Business Situations

Sale of Business Property   START

 

The reason for this is that you will need to claim the depreciation allowed for the short time you rented it in 2023 as Ordinary Income when you sell the property, (unless the depreciation is lost)

So, if the stepped up value was 500,000 when inherited and you received 5,000 depreciation in 2023, you'll enter that 5,000 as depreciation taken on the property. this can't be done if the sale is reported in the "investment" section.

 

Also, be sure to enter the date your mother purchased the property as the date you acquired it. Capital Gain is treated as long-term for inherited property, but that option (to report that it was inherited) is not available in the Business section.

 

You don't have a choice about the depreciation, if it was a rental for any time that you owned it, you are required to recapture what was, or should have been, taken.

 

If you made significant improvements, add that to the stepped-up basis.

Enter the selling costs, such as commissions. 

 

You should end up having to claim at least some of the depreciation recapture (Schedule 1) and perhaps a long-term capital loss 

OR

If you end up with a long-term capital gain, you will need to claim all the depreciation recapture. 

 

Entering the sale in the Business section will put what you need to claim on the correct forms. 

 

You'll need to know what depreciation was claimed in 2023 when you file 2024, so keep a copy of Schedule E and your depreciation report for next year. 

 

 

 

 

 

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