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Generally, no - The IRS says in Pub. 537 - Installment Sales:
If you sell depreciable property to certain related persons, you generally can’t report the sale using the installment method. Instead, all payments to be received are considered received in the year of sale.
HOWEVER, there is an exception to this rule:
You can use the installment method to report a sale of depreciable property to a related person if no significant tax deferral benefit will be derived from the sale. You must show to the satisfaction of the IRS that avoidance of federal income tax wasn’t one of the principal purposes of the sale.
There is also a special rule if your relative sells, exchanges, or gives away the property. For more information on this see page 7 of Pub. 537 - Installment Sales
You can report the proceeds from an installment sale by following these steps:
Hi,
Does anyone know how IRS defines - "no significant tax deferal benefit can be derived from the sale". How does IRS expect to prove that "avoidance of federal income tax wasn’t one of the principal purposes of the sale".
Thank you
@Drindin Unfortunately, this is probably more a question for a tax attorney based on individual situations.
Ok ... there are 2 separate factors here :
1) can you sell the home and receive the payment in installments that include interest ? YES YOU CAN BUT ...
2) can you report the sale on the tax return on the form 6252 for installment sales ? MOST LIKELY NOT... SEE THE RULES ABOVE.
Seems that the restrictions is limitted to sale of depreciable property to controlled entity, not between two humans - relatives (mom and son for example).
"Generally, if you sell depreciable property to a related person (as defined in section 453(g)(3)), you can’t report the sale using the installment method"
This is from the the form instructions at the back: https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f6252.pdf
Following 453(g)(3)) in https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/453 we get:
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1239
1239(b) seems to say:
"(b)Related persons For purposes of subsection (a), the term “related persons” means—
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