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Yes, you should prorate the amounts between Schedule A (for the time you lived there) and Schedule E (for the time you rented it out).
When you enter the date that condo became a rental in TurboTax, the depreciation will be automatically calculated only for the time you rented it.
For all other expenses, you can prorate as follows:
Example: Let's say that you lived in your home Jan 1 - Mar 31 (3 months) and rented it Apr 1 - Dec 31 (9 months). Let's also say that you had Mortgage Interest of $5,000, Real Estate Taxes of $2,000 and Home Owners Insurance of $500. These costs would be allocated as follows:
Please note: for the time you lived there, you'd only be able to deduct the applicable Mortgage Interest and Real Estate Taxes. You would not be able to deduct that portion of depreciation or condo insurance.
Yes, you should prorate the amounts between Schedule A (for the time you lived there) and Schedule E (for the time you rented it out).
When you enter the date that condo became a rental in TurboTax, the depreciation will be automatically calculated only for the time you rented it.
For all other expenses, you can prorate as follows:
Example: Let's say that you lived in your home Jan 1 - Mar 31 (3 months) and rented it Apr 1 - Dec 31 (9 months). Let's also say that you had Mortgage Interest of $5,000, Real Estate Taxes of $2,000 and Home Owners Insurance of $500. These costs would be allocated as follows:
Please note: for the time you lived there, you'd only be able to deduct the applicable Mortgage Interest and Real Estate Taxes. You would not be able to deduct that portion of depreciation or condo insurance.
I understand how to prorate the amount, but how to enter it? I am using desktop version and in "Home loan deduction summary" page and should I just enter the prorated the amount or the exact amount from 1098? Also since I rented out my previous home and moved to a new home I bought, should I put both homes as primary residency?
My personal preference is to do the prorations manually and enter the rental portion in the Sch E area and the personal portion in the Sch A area but you can let the program do the math for you if you answer the use questions correctly. Review the return carefully prior to filing to make sure the proper amounts are in the correct places.
While you have the option to "let TurboTax do it for you", I don't recommend it. That's because there are some things that can't be prorated correctly or at all by the program.
For your typical rental expenses such as repairs, maint, advertising, etc, you only enter costs incurred after converting it to a rental. Now while the program will prorate the property taxes and mortgage insurance, it seems to have difficulty with the property insurance. That's because property insurance is not a SCH A itemized deduction and never has been. So you pro-rate the property insurance for the rental time only.
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