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posted Jun 5, 2019 11:36:05 PM

I lost earnest money deposit on a home purchase and seems that is a Schedule D loss IF THE HOME WAS FOR RENTAL. Do I need to prove it was for rental?

From previous answers to similar questions, it seems that it could be a Schedule D loss for acquiring a new venture that turned out to be not viable. Also, if we do deduct it, will the entire loss be deductible from other income (my other income is W2 wages income) or only 3000, the passive loss limit?

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1 Best answer
Intuit Alumni
Jun 5, 2019 11:36:05 PM

The loss on this purchase is a short-term capital loss. You do not need to prove that it was for rental.

The maximum deduction for capital losses is equal to your capital gains plus $3,000. If you had no capital gains, then your loss is limited to $3,000 per year until you have depleted your capital loss carryover. You will need to keep track of this capital loss carryover, which TurboTax will do as long as you keep importing the previous year's return into your current year.

Make sure that you keep backup electronic copies of your TurboTax files to guard against loss in case of a computer crash. The only copies that TurboTax Windows automatically keeps are on your computer, not in the cloud.

This article explains more about the tax treatment of capital gains and losses.



1 Replies
Intuit Alumni
Jun 5, 2019 11:36:05 PM

The loss on this purchase is a short-term capital loss. You do not need to prove that it was for rental.

The maximum deduction for capital losses is equal to your capital gains plus $3,000. If you had no capital gains, then your loss is limited to $3,000 per year until you have depleted your capital loss carryover. You will need to keep track of this capital loss carryover, which TurboTax will do as long as you keep importing the previous year's return into your current year.

Make sure that you keep backup electronic copies of your TurboTax files to guard against loss in case of a computer crash. The only copies that TurboTax Windows automatically keeps are on your computer, not in the cloud.

This article explains more about the tax treatment of capital gains and losses.