in [Event] Ask the Experts: Tax Law Changes - One Big Beautiful Bill
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the fair market value of such items after a fire is zero.
What about determining the fair market value before the fire?
You would need to consider each item's age and condition.
The fair market value is the amount that a willing buyer would pay for the item and a willing seller would accept as payment.
The value of a property or item before a fire, is usually more than $0. It will be the price a willing buyer would pay, and the seller would accept. For small items, think more like pricing items for a garage sale.
The value of a property or item after the fire is usually $0 if the item was no longer usable for it's intended purpose.
However, that's not true for real estate. Here's why.
When your rental property burns to the ground and is declared a total loss by the insurance company, then it is a total loss for the insurance company. But it's not a total loss for you. You still have the land and that land still retains it's value. The insurance company has only insured the structure; not the land. So if the house burns to the ground, from the insurance company's perspective, it's a total loss "for them". You don't lose a penny of value in the land.
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