Own Two family house .We live on first floor and renting a 2nd floor. While being rented celling and wall ON 2ND FLOOR were partially damaged by the leak. Contractor was hired and repaired partially damaged areas and repainted. We were charged $3000.00. How much of this can we deduct in the same year it happened?
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You can deduct the full amount paid for the damages to the rental area.
However, if you also paid anything to fix whatever caused the leak, that could be a different answer, depending on the details.
I agree about the roof and that is why my prior comment said the repairing the leak could be different.
But the OP isn't asking about repairing a roof. He is asking about the ceiling and paint in the rental area.
You can probably deduct 50% of the repair cost depending on how you've been splitting expenses since you live on the first floor of what is presumably a two flat.
I thought I SHOULD DEDUCT ALL $3000.00 Since happened on floor that's being rented ?
Yes, except you hold 50% of the property for personal use.
Note that you would be unable to deduct any part of the repair if you held ALL of the property for personal use.
You can deduct the full amount paid for the damages to the rental area.
However, if you also paid anything to fix whatever caused the leak, that could be a different answer, depending on the details.
I view this a little differently.
The roof covers the entire structure and only half of that structure is being rented. The roof would have to be repaired even if the second floor that is rented was not rented but held for personal use.
The roof is only part of the premises that is being rented. If this were a single-family home it would be a different matter.
I agree about the roof and that is why my prior comment said the repairing the leak could be different.
But the OP isn't asking about repairing a roof. He is asking about the ceiling and paint in the rental area.
He is asking about the ceiling and paint in the rental area.
Missed that, although I don't know how. Absolutely deductible if it's the ceiling/walls in the rental unit, I 100% agree.
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