I spent $4900 for wood floors on a residential rental property in 2018. I entered it as Capital Improvement, and TurboTax is asking if I want to take Section 179 deduction. However I read on TaxAct.com that Section 179 deduction is not allowed for rental property -- is this true? If so why is TurboTax not telling me that i am not allowed to take it (TurboTax knows this is a rental property)?
UPDATED FOR TAX YEAR 2019
Yes - While you cannot take Section 179 deduction for the residential rental property, itself, you can use Section 179 to deduct tangible, long-term personal property. This includes, for example, kitchen appliances, carpets, drapes, or blinds.
[Edited | 4/15/2020 | 1:35pm PDT]
UPDATED FOR TAX YEAR 2019
Yes - While you cannot take Section 179 deduction for the residential rental property, itself, you can use Section 179 to deduct tangible, long-term personal property. This includes, for example, kitchen appliances, carpets, drapes, or blinds.
[Edited | 4/15/2020 | 1:35pm PDT]
I talked to one TurboTax Live Expert this morning who said I can go ahead and take Section 179 for kitchen and bath remodeling, and guided me to enter a the bath remodel as capital improvement with 27.5 yr depreciation and with Section 179 with no error or warning.
However, when I got TurboTax "Final Reviews", it said "Cannot use Section 179 for Real Properties"!?
So I called a second Live Expert who said I cannot use Section 179 for anything that would be depreciated 27.5 years
Who is right??