Do I need to file form 8858 if I directly own a foreign rental property?
Instruction says anyone who owns either Foreign Disregarded Entities (FDEs) or Foreign Branches (FBs) are required to file, but what if I just directly own a foreign rental property?
I heard that IRS recently expanded filing requirement for form 8858, which makes it even more confusing.
Is there any penalty for not filing in this case?
Any help is appreciated, thank you.
You'll need to sign in or create an account to connect with an expert.
I don't believe you have to file that form since it is basically for owners of an FDE or who operate an FB (and I don't believe rental real estate would be so considered).
Regardless, I will page Champ @pk for input.
@oboero2 , Is your rental / income property owned directly by you OR is it through some kind of entity ( LLC, Partnership, corp etc. etc. ) ?
If the latter and not a self-standing entity then it may be Dis-regarded entity, in which case , yes you would need to file form 8858.
If on the other hand you are the owner of the income property , then if you use the services of an agent or a management company , the incomes and expenses are reported on Schedule-E. You do not need the form 8858. Please share more info on the exact nature of your foreign income asset --please .
I don't know of any specific penalty for not filing a form when required to other than that for " failure to file a return"
Thank you for your reply.
I directly own the foreign rental property.
I don't have a foreign bank account so I pay foreign management company service fees to manage and collect the rental income on my behalf. The foreign management company then sends the rental income to my US bank account.
I have heard about the recent changes in 2018 that expanded the filing requirement for 8858, by making just "owing a foreign rental property" count towards owing a "Foreign Branches," but I wasn't sure.
@oboero2 , see this -- instruction for form 8858 -- page 1 " Who Must File"
--> Instructions for Form 8858 (Rev. December 2023) (irs.gov)
Hope this clarifies the situation.
Namaste ji
Thanks for the link, I have actually already read this many times and still confused. What is your interpretation?
Still have questions?
Make a postAsk questions and learn more about your taxes and finances.
Kishore_Susmita
Level 1
SimpleTaxes
New Member
RustyShackleford
Level 3
grahamconway
New Member
RustyShackleford
Level 3
Did the information on this page answer your question?
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the TurboTax Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the Community and be taken to that site instead.