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New Member
posted Jun 4, 2019 1:39:24 PM

My rental house was destroyed by fire but I rebuilt and then sold it. How and where do I enter all the expenses as well as the insurance reimbursements?

0 26 5895
24 Replies
Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:26 PM

Did you rent out the property at all, after it was rebuilt?

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:26 PM

I received 6 months rental reimbursement from the insurance but no- the house was not rented after the rebuild

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:28 PM

You need to look in the Assets/Depreciation section to get the total amount of depreciation taken on the property.
Basically, you're going to delete the rental property asset listed, and replace it with a new listing.
Your "cost" of this asset will be as follows:
What you paid for the rebuid, and DO include in that amount what the insurance company paid, plus the cost of the land that you originally had allocated to the land portion in the original asset listing, plus the amount of depreciation taken on the structure prior to the fire.
So for the total amount you will enter in the COST box, it's
 What you paid for the rebuild
    PLUS
 What you allocated as value to the land on the original asset entry for the rental property
    PLUS
 The amount of depreciation taken on the property prior to the fire.
Let's use some actual numbers here.
Originally paid $100,000 for the property. When I entered it into TurboTax in the COST box I entered $100,000. Then in the COST OF LAND box, $30K of that $100K was for the land. So I entered $30K in the COST OF LAND box. The program does the math and deprecated $70 for the structure over 27.5 years.
Now I'm 10 years in and the house burns to the ground. Total loss. At this point, I have taken a total of $25,500 in depreication on the house over the last 10 years.
 Cost to rebuild was $150K. So I select the "Add an Asset" button in the program. I'll probably enter "new construction" or something like that for the description. Then for the cost box here's the math.
What I paid for the rebuild -------------------------------$150,000
Amount allocated to land ORIGINALLY -------------- $30,000
Amount of depreciation already taken prior to fire- $25,500
TOTAL -------------------------------------------------------$205,500  (This is the amount to be entered in the COST box)
For COST OF LAND box, you take the original cost for that and add the depreciation already taken to it. So using my numbers above the COST OF LAND box will have $55,500 entered in it.
Now, depreciation will start anew and it's gets depreciated over 27.5 years starting from the "in service" date you will enter (discussed below).
Now here's the tricky part. I'm assuming this rebuild was completed in 2017. If so, then this isn't so "tricky" really. You know that part of your insurance payout that was for "lost rent"? Well guess what? It's taxable income to you. You have to report it and pay taxes on it.
Make the "in service" date for the property, the day the CO (certificate of occupancy) was issued. Then when you get to it, enter the rental income received from the insurance company and press on.
For the original asset (the one that burned down) you need to delete it from the Assets/Deprecation section. All required information from that old asset has been transferred and accounted for in the new asset for this property.
Finally, finish working through the rental property "as if" you did not sell it. Once it all works out, let me know and I can provide you the details (which are easy in comparison to the above) necessary for you to report the sale of this property.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:30 PM

Great feedback. Thank you very much.

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:33 PM

Basically what's happening here, is that you have to account for the depreication already taken on the property prior to the fire. When you sell, all depreciation has to be recaptured and you pay taxes on that recaptured depreciation in the year you sell the property. So in order to account for that depreciation in 2017 without you having to recapture it ant pay taxes on it in 2017, you add that depreciation to the cost of the land. As you know, land is depreciable. So by doing this you "account" for that depreciation, and you won't pay taxes on it until the year you sell the property. Since you sold it in 2017, this all "works out in the wash" for you just perfect.
After doing all the above, the answer box below is how you will report the sale. You'll just work through the Rental & Royalty Income (SCH E) section again and use the guidance below to report the sale. Piece 'o cake!

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:34 PM

Thank you very much. That makes perfect sense.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:35 PM

Carl- checking my 2015 return and there is no breakdown for the depreciation of the land and the house itself. Both values are lumped together apparently.

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:37 PM

The only way there's no breakdown, is if you entered nothing, or a zero for the value of the land. Why are you looking at the 2015 return anyway? That will not give you the figures you need. In what year did the house burn? In what year were you issued the CO after the rebuild? I'm concerned, because there may be some assumptions I'm making that may be wrong.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:38 PM

I got the house via a quitclaim on a landcontact to my brother in 2006. It's a piece of crap 400 sq ft house so maybe there was neve a value associated with the structure? It burned Dec 24th 2015 and I decided to demolish the structure in Feb 2017 and rebuild. I got the occupancy permit in August 2017 and sold the new house in October 2017

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:40 PM

Ah okay. So I was making some incorrect assumptions. The 2015 return is the one you want. On that return for 2015, did you show you converted the property from rental to personal use? Hopefully you did, so that depreciation stopped.
Am I correct in assuming you did not report anything concerning this property on your 2016 return?

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:41 PM

No - I did not convert it to personal use because I still had renters and wasn't sure if the house was livable or repairable. So I filed 2016 with the house as being rented for the entire year.

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:42 PM

That was a boo-boo actually. By the tax filing deadline (which was Apr 18 last year) you would have known by then. What I would suggest you do is one of two things (and doing it later won't prevent you from going ahead with your 2017 taxes). Either amend the 2015 tax return to show the property converted to personal use on Dec 31st of 2015. Or you can amend the 2016 return and show the property converted to personal use on Jan 1, 2016. You want to do this to stop depreciation for the entire 2016 tax year that you couldn't rent it out, even if you wanted to. WHen it comes time to sell the program (which you did in 2017) that year's worth of depreciation can hurt.
But first, lets see what the yearly depreciation is, to see if it's even worthwhile to you. I assume you have a printout of your 2015 return. If you don't, then open up the 2015 tax file (using TurboTax 2015 if you didn't save it in PDF format). What you need is the printout or PDF that shows you everything; worksheets and all. Not just the forms "required to filing" or the forms "to keep for your records". You want everything. The PDF could easily be over 100 pages too. So don't let that surprise you.
What you are looking for is the 2015 IRS Form 4562 for that property. There will be three of them for that property. One prints in portrait format, and the other two print in landscape format. Of the two that print landscape, you want the one titled "Depreciation and Amortization Report".
On that 4562 you will at a minimum, see the property itself listed there. If you've done any property improvements they will be listed also. Under the "cost - net of land" column is the value of the structure. The "land" column shows the value of the land.
The "prior depreciation" column shows the amount of deprecation taken *BEFORE* 2015. Then the "current deprecation" column shows the deprecation taken *IN* 2015. In order to get the total depreciation taken, you have to add those last two columns together. That total is what you have to recapture and pay taxes on, in the year you sell the property.
Now we've been looking at the 2015 return. So in order to get the "correct" figure, if you deprecated it in 2016 (which would have been a bad idea since there is no rental income in 2016 to take that depreciation against) you need that same 4562 from the 2016 tax return.
What's the current year's deprecation you see on the 2015 form 4562? Let's see if this is worth an amendment or not.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:44 PM

Carl, I don't think I need to amend anything. The property was rented through December 2016. Even though the fire occurred that same month. I may have misspoke the date earlier. The cost ( net of land) is $49776 which was the total cost of the property. 27.5 yr depreciation is $1810 per year with the prior depreciation of $15008.

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:45 PM

If you didn't report your rental "at all" on the 2016 return, then you will have to enter everything manually on the 2017 return. If the figures you quoted are off the 2015 form 4562, then when entering the data in the 2017 program the prior year's depreciation already taken will be the sum of $15,008 plus the $1810 in depreciation for the 2015 tax year. The reason that number needs to be right, is because you have to recapture that depreciation and pay taxes on it, in the year you sell the property. If it's wrong, you can bet your sweet bippy the IRS will catch it (usually 2-3 years after you file) and audit you on it.
If you did "NOT" report the rental at all on the 2016 return to show it's conversion to personal use, then at this point I really wouldn't worry about it. Don't recapture depreciation for 2016, since it wasn't rented out in 2016. Then, if you do get audited on that, all you have to do is amend the 2016 return to convert the property to personal use on Jan 1, 2016. That stops the depreciation. Of course, then you'll have to amend the 2017 return just to "show" you converted it back to rental property on the date the CO was issued.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:46 PM

The property WAS rented throughout 2016 and was declared as such. For that matter the insurance reimbursed me for 6 months rent so realistically it was rented through June 2017. I don't see why you want me to declare it as personal use any earlier than that date.

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:48 PM

If the rental income for the time between the burn date and the date the CO was issued for the new construction was covered by the insurance, then you're right. There's really no need for tax purposes, to convert it to personal use at all. So you'll use the figures on the 4562 from the 2017 return you're completing now. I'm assuming you reported it as a rental for the entire 2016 tax year and showed it as rented all year weather you reported any rental income for 2016 or not. Normally, periods of vacancy between renters also counts as "days rented" too, even though you don't receive income for that short period of vacancy between tenants.
Sounds to me like this will be easier than I imagined if my assumptions are correct, or at least somewhat close.
 - The property is shown as rented for all of 2016, regardless of the rental income received.
 - Depreciation was claimed for all of 2016 (even though it may not have all been deductible, due to the reduced rental income received in 2016 - even if no income was received at all, really.)
Then on the 2017 return all you're really doing is entering the property as a new asset where you add all the prior depreciation (do not include any depreciation already claimed for 2017)  to the value of the land. You don't include the 2017 depreciation because you're going to be deleting that old asset, after you get all the numbers from it for the new construction asset. Besides, neither asset was "in service" before the CO issue date anyway.
Just make sure  the "in service" date of the new construction asset is not a date before the CO was issued, and you should be fine.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:49 PM

I have a similar situation and I am confused by this answer. Everything I've read says to decrease the basis by depreciation, and your saying increase it. If I do this it will lower the gain, and therefore the taxes.

New Member
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:52 PM

Your comment also says "Do include the insurance...". Can you direct me to the IRS instructions that allow this?

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:54 PM

I think you're just not "getting it" yet. Took me awhile before I got it to. Basically you're recapturing the depreciation by adding it to the value of the land. Then you pay your taxes on that depreciation when you report the loss and insurance payout in the Casualty & Thefts section. It's important to click the links in the Casualty & Thefts section and read them. It tells you that you will reduce your loss by the amount of depreciation taken. That makes the "depreciation part" of the insurance payout taxable income. The program also gives you the option to defer paying taxes on that gain until the year you sell the property too, if you want.  Remember, when reporting it in the Casualty & Thefts section you are NOT claiming a total loss of what you paid for the property. You DID NOT lose the land. Your loss, is the value of the structure ONLY, minus the depreciation already taken on it.

Level 15
Jun 4, 2019 1:39:55 PM

Reporting the Sale of Rental Property

You MUST have done as outlined above in the comments, for this to work out and make sense to you.

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  2016". Select it. After you select the "I sold or otherwise disposed of this property in 2016" 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 it's 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 our 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 2015" 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.


Level 1
May 12, 2021 9:59:01 AM

I have a question on rental property that had two separate fires.  The rental property in question had a fire in late 2018, we started the rebuild process, then had a second fire in fall of 2019.  We sold the property in early 2020 and had no reimbursement from the insurance company on loss of rental for 2020.  I have put this property in the rental section and get to the sale of the property, but because the sale was considerably less than the purchase price, I am told I don't have to report it.  The same goes with the Casualty Loss.  We received a 1099-S for the purchase of the property, so I am a little confused as to what to do with this rental property.  

Expert Alumni
May 13, 2021 5:53:52 PM

The fires in 2018 and 2019 would have reported casualty losses in 2018 and 2019. See Topic No. 515 Casualty, Disaster, and Theft Losses | IRS.

 

For 2020, it was not rented so you need to go into each asset and mark that it was sold for $0 except for the house. You are saying that the cost basis of the house minus depreciation over the years is greater than the sales price. The program should still be taking the information and counting it. A loss is deductible. See Sales, Trades, Exchanges

 

@Sandy74

Level 1
May 21, 2021 10:05:32 AM

I did report it on the 4797, but there is no where on the form to show how much insurance paid.  The insurance paid for both the 2018 and 2019 fire; however, after the second fire, we decided not to rebuild and sold.  We sold basically the land for $10,000, which is far less than the original price of the house minus the depreciation.  

Level 15
May 21, 2021 6:28:07 PM

@Sandy74 You've posted as an "add on" to a thread you did not start, and it's over a year old pertaining to the 2019 tax year.  If you would please, start your own new thread providing all the pertinent details to your specific situation, and I"ll be happy to take a shot at it.