I have an interesting situation that I haven't been able to find the answer for. I purchased a home at the end of 2020 and started renting out a room in my home starting April 2021. I received a single 1098 that I now need to split between my Schedule A and Schedule E.
I did a bunch of reading from other posts, and am following this publication to work through it:
What I've done:
I'm 99% sure I did the steps above correctly, but here's the kicker.
Should I be dividing the mortgage balance along with the deductions between Schedule A and Schedule E? Or do they have to fall under $750k total? I know this is a bit weird because I don't think Schedule E rentals are restricted by that same $750k limit.
Would really appreciate any clarity on this matter! Thanks!
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You are correct there in the steps you listed and regarding the Schedule E not having the same 750K restrictions.
And yes, you would multiple the rental area portion by the total balance as if it was a detached property with a separate mortgage that you would be claiming the mortgage interest on.
You are correct there in the steps you listed and regarding the Schedule E not having the same 750K restrictions.
And yes, you would multiple the rental area portion by the total balance as if it was a detached property with a separate mortgage that you would be claiming the mortgage interest on.
Is my understanding below correct? For simplicity let's say principal of the loan is $1M, interest on the mortgage is $16k, and 25% of the house was rented out throughout the entire 2022.
Schedule E: claim $4k of mortgage interest (16k * 25%)
Schedule A: claim $12k of mortgage interest (16k * 75%)
Is my understanding correct?
No, if you enter the full amount from Form 1098 under Rental Expenses, TurboTax automatically allocates the correct percentage of the interest to rental expenses and the balance is transferred to Your Home under Deductions and Credits.
The rental portion is fully deductible on Schedule E.
Is the expected behavior:
Will the $12k be prorated due to $750k limit?
For what it's worth, I jumped on a call with a TurboTax expert a couple months ago and these are the steps we took off his advice:
So unfortunately in your example, you do "waste" $250k in non-deductible interest. I would love to know if you heard something different from a different accountant, because I ended up not taking full advantage of my interest paid as deductible as well.
No, it may not. Therefore, you will have to manually calculate the remaining mortgage amount, the mortgage interest applicable to that mortgage amount, and finally calculate how much of the mortgage interest you can deduct on Schedule A given the $750,000 limit on aggregate mortgage indebtedness. You are correct, in that you should enter your rental property information first (in your case the rental room) as TurboTax will allocate the appropriate percentage of expenses to the rental room including the allocable percentage of the mortgage.
After entering the essential information about your rental room, you may see a screen indicating that the remaining portion of the mortgage interest, i.e., the mortgage interest that applies to your personal residence, will be transferred to Schedule A. However, double check that entry to make sure it does not include mortgage interest that is allocable to the aggregate indebtedness greater than $750,000. If it does, you will need to manually adjust the amount.
Follow-up with us and provide additional information if appropriate so that we can better understand your tax situation.
I also rent rooms in my home, and I may misunderstand the previous answer, or TT is just getting it wrong. In the rental expense questionnaire on TT I checked Yes to let TT do the math. I entered the percentage as 30.0 and then entered the full mortgage expense. The numbers shown for my deductions that will be applied to the rental portion look correct (total x 0.3). But when I got to the section on my home mortage deduction (owners part), the amount supplied by TT was zero. The name of the lender was correct, but TT did not transfer any of my mortgage to the homeowners section. So if I were to use this method I don't know what number I should enter there.
Did I do something wrong? In the past I never trusted TT to get this right, and always did the calculation myself. I'd recommend that approach still.
If you rent out 30% of your home, be sure that your business use is 30% in the Property Profile.
Your Schedule E Worksheet should show the total Mortgage Interest in Column A, the 30% amount allocated to the Rental in Column C, and the Personal % in Column E.
On Schedule A, you should see the personal portion of your Mortgage Interest on Line 8a. You shouldn't enter anything in the Personal portion; the totals are entered in the Rental section, and the personal % is transferred over. If you have no amount on Line 8a of Schedule A, try deleting/re-entering your numbers in the Rental section.
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