My mother passed away Jan 2025. There was a TODDA to me, Therefore, mom's house was transferred to me. I live in Florida. The house was her main residence and is in Ohio. Am I able to deduct: repairs, inspection cost, appraisal cost, trip expenses back/ forth, "loss" on sale ( appraisal vs sale price ), etc.
Please advise
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Yes, you can use expenses as part of your sales expense. If any of the repairs were capital improvements to the house see the information below.
Be sure to report your inherited house sale using the steps below.
Your cost basis is the fair market value on the date of death of the decedent, plus the capital improvements (not repairs but improvements that are capital in nature). The expenses of sale will reduce any gain or increase any loss as well. This is entered as the sale of investment property and can be entered as follows.
Enter the inherited property sale in TurboTax using the steps provided.
Diane
I was told by a CPA that I could NOT use the house sale as a deduction because it is considered a "personal asset".
So who is correct?
It depends. If you never lived in the house as your home, if it is not a second home you used, your inheritance is received as investment property. An inherited house is considered investment property and you can deduct the loss on the inherited property, but only if there was no personal use after your mother passed away - it was simply held between inheritance and sale.
Inherited Property (IRS Pub 550): If you sell or dispose of inherited property that is a capital asset, the gain or loss is considered long term, regardless of how long you held the property. For more information on inherited property, see Pub. 559.
I never lived in the house.
It was not my 2nd house........only for Jan to May !
The house is "inherited" by her death and with the TODDA , transferred to me in my name.
There was no personal use after her death. It was in my name from Jan to May 2025.
I was only there to facilitate the estate sale, repairs, appraisal, open houses, travel expenses back/forth from Florida/Ohio, etc.
The definition of inherited is key.......as it was transferred to my name.
The house may qualify as investment property as evidenced by your actions to immediately prepare it for sale after you inherited it, coupled by your not using it for personal purposes. If so, a loss sustained on it could be deducted.
The other problem you have is proving that is was sold for less than the fair market value you assigned to it when you took possession of it. The IRS could argue that it was worth what you sold it for, being that you sold it soon after the valuation date. Assuming you have a reasonable basis for the fair market value you assigned to it, the loss may be allowed by the IRS.
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