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ggdonegal
New Member

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

 
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I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

You are mixing up types of losses, but the short answer is that all of the losses from your rental will be usable in the year of the sale.

If you sell your rental at a loss, that loss is fully usable in the year of the sale.

If your rental had Passive Loss Carryovers, those are also fully usable in the year of the sale (assuming it was sold in a "fully taxable transaction").

If you had previous Capital Loss Carryovers from something else, the sale of your rental doesn't really affect that.


As Carl noted, some people misunderstand what selling a rental property at a "loss" means.  The depreciation that you were able to take lowers your Basis, so it is common to sell at a gain even if the sale price was less than the original purchase price.

If the home was previously your personal residence, that also can have a very significant effect on determining if you had a loss or not.  If that is the case, please post back, as TurboTax misguides you in reporting the rental in certain circumstances.

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22 Replies
Carl
Level 15

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

IT will be. Just understand that no matter what you do, the depreciation you're required to recapture "will" be taxed. No way out of that. But your carry over's will basically over time "cancel" it out.
On rental property, all carry over losses on that property are "realized" in the year you sell up to a limit. Excess can continue to carry over.
lindajof
New Member

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

what form do you use for the carry over? TT is putting the entire loss on line 14 for 2017

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

It does not carry over, the entire loss is used in the year of the sale.

In the event the loss is large enough to create total negative income on your tax return (Line 41 of your Form 1040 would be negative), then that "Net Operating Loss" (NOL) can be carried back or carried forward.  The program should alert you to that if that happens.
Carl
Level 15

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

Just keep in mind that sometimes folks forget to take into consideration the depreciation recapture, and then wonder why they have a taxable gain, when they were expecting a loss.

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

Is any of this affected by Alternative Minimum Tax?
Carl
Level 15

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

No not directly. Tax paid already is tax paid already. Do note that in the year you sell all carry forward losses are allowed against other ordinary income.

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

Sorry to be dense, but let's say that you sell a property and the previous carried forward passive losses are $500K but income that year is also $500K. Does that in effect reduce income to $0? Is AMT triggered in this simple example, or does it not apply because it is losses on previous income?

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

Yes, that would make your income $0.  With $0 of income, there would not be any AMT for that year.  The Passive Losses are not an adjustment for AMT.
lindajof
New Member

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

I actually found a way to carry forward  ... there's no actual line on the 1040.. I used line 21 and made it  the opposite sign to make income  zero.. and you have to file a statement that you are not carrying it back two years.  IRC Section 172 b3
lindajof
New Member

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

More facts....I inherited the house in 2007...it was appraised at $358K...... the height of the market.  Even recapturing the depreciation....and selling for $240K....I had a $70K loss..... which I didn't want to take all in 2017,     after HOURS of research ... I found the above... and made the adjustment.  So fat it's been accepted...

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

@lindajof    No, you CAN'T do that.  You can't selectively choose not to take the loss.  You MUST claim the entire loss.  

*IF* that loss results in total negative income on your tax return (Line 41 of your 2017 Form 1040 would be negative), THEN you have a Net Operating Loss, and the program will ask you if you want to carry that EXCESS amount forward.

Again, you can NOT selectively choose not to take the loss.  You can NOT put a negative number on Line 21 just because you don't want to claim it.  If you did that, you NEED to amend your tax return to correct it.
lindajof
New Member

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

I adjusted against any and all  income I had and then made line 21 the difference so line  38 came to zero.      If it's wrong , I'm sure I'll hear from the IRS...LOL

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

You can't do that.  You really need to amend.

As your tax return shows now, you DON'T have a Net Operating Loss to carry forward (Line 38 and Line 41 are not negative), so your losses would be permanently lost.
lindajof
New Member

I am selling a rental property at a loss this year. Can the capital loss be added to my carry forward losses from previous years?

PS...TOTAL loss was on line 14 btw
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