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I had no income from a rental in 2017. When Turbo Tax asked if I sold it, it deleted the property from my rental list. How do I report the sale now?

 
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3 Replies
Carl
Level 15

I had no income from a rental in 2017. When Turbo Tax asked if I sold it, it deleted the property from my rental list. How do I report the sale now?

You need to start over and re-import everything anew from the 2016 return. Not having rental income for the year does not mean you don't have to file a SCH E. (Regardless of what the program may tell you, which is wrong.) Click the TOOLS button, then select the clear and start over option and import again from the 2016 tax return.

In your specific case when asked by the program, you will indicate that you rented it for one day in 2017, and that you had ZERO days of personal use. (assuming the property was not your primary residence for one single day in 2017). The rental income reported will still be zero dollars.

Reporting the Sale of Rental Property

If you qualify for the "lived in 2 of last 5 years" capital gains exclusion, then when prompted you WILL indicate that this sale DOES INCLUDE the sale of your main home. For AD MIL personnel who don't qualify because of PCS orders, select this option anyway, because you "MIGHT" qualify for at last a partial exclusion.

Start working through Rental & Royalty Income (SCH E) "AS IF" you did not sell the property. One of the screens near the start will ahve a selection on it for "I sold or otherwise disposed of this property in  2017". Select it. After you select the "I sold or otherwise disposed of this property in 2017" you continue working it through "as if" you still own it. When you come to the summary screen you will enter all of your rental income and expenses, even it it's zero. Then you MUST work through the "Sale of Assets/Depreciation" section. You must work through each individual asset one at a time to report its disposition (in your case, all your rental assets were sold).

Understand that if more than the property itself is listed in your assets list, then you need to allocate your sales price across all of your assets.  You will only allocate the structure sales price; you will NOT allocate the land sales price, since the land is not a depreciable asset.  Then if you sold this rental at a gain, you must show a gain on all assets, even if that gain is $1. Likewise if you sold at a loss then you must show a loss on all assets, even if that loss is $1

Basically when working through an asset you select the option for "I stopped using this asset in 2017" and go from there. Note that you MUST do this for EACH AND EVERY asset listed.

When you finish working through everything listed in the assets section, if you ever at any time you owned this rental you claimed vehicle expenses, then you must also work through the vehicle section and show the disposition of the vehicle. Most likely, your vehicle disposition will be "removed for personal use", as I seriously doubt you sold your vehicle as a part of this rental sale.


 


I had no income from a rental in 2017. When Turbo Tax asked if I sold it, it deleted the property from my rental list. How do I report the sale now?

DONT DO THIS!!!  I lost everything for all my tax years previously.  I don't know what I am going to do now.
Carl
Level 15

I had no income from a rental in 2017. When Turbo Tax asked if I sold it, it deleted the property from my rental list. How do I report the sale now?

If you clear and start over, then you can just import anew from the 2016 return. But the fact is, you are starting your 2017 return from scratch. You really have no other choice unless you want to spend the time manually entering everything. Either way, you're spending the time. If you're not starting your 2017 taxes over from scratch and re-importing all from 2016, then you are manually having to enter everything that would have otherwise been imported from the 2016 return. The choice is yours. But if you don't clear and start over and re-import everything, if you make a mistake on your manually entry of the otherwise imported data, it will come back to bite you a few years down the road, and instead of costing you time, it will cost you $money$.
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