Income Tax Accounting
The attached article, Skip the Dorm, Buy your Kid a Condo, discusses some tax planning measures you can readily identify with and coincide with LO 5 Real Estate Rentals of Ch 14 and Passive Activities covered in Ch 7. Read the article and see if you agree with the author’s suggestions. Alternatively, do you think the IRS would have any issues here? Comment on your thoughts.
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In “Skip the Dorm, buy your kid a condo,” Bischoff explains the benefit of purchasing a condo for the college-going kid instead of renting out an apartment. The author explains that the tax rule restricts the deduction of losses incurred from owning and leasing residential suites used by your or a closely related family member. Nonetheless, there lies an exception when the family member hires as the principal income. I concur with the author regarding deducting the tax losses from the condo rented out to one’s college kid since they would exclusively use the apartment as their residential area during college. Moreover, if the kid shares the space with roommates, the tax loss can be deducted since it is rented out to a third party.
I concur with the author regarding the condo throwing off tax loss after subtracting depreciation. Even though the condo is expected to appreciate once real estate increases in value, accounting standards allow us to depreciate buildings and premises, reducing the taxes paid. I also concur with the author’s statement that passive income from other sources is unnecessary in deducting rental losses amounting to $25000 per year. Nonetheless, I’m afraid I have to disagree with the rent classification as a passive income. The rent received by the condo’s owner has been issued to the kid as pocket money. The parent earned money and gave it to the student, who then used it to pay rent. Therefore, it does not come out purely as passive income. If the kid and their friends share the condo, the lease paid by the roommates would be categorized as passive income and liable for the tax losses.
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Question
Income Tax Accounting
The article, Skip the Dorm, Buy your Kid a Condo, discusses some tax planning measures you can readily identify with and coincide with LO 5 Real Estate Rentals of Ch 14 and Passive Activities covered in Ch 7.
Read the article and see if you agree with the author’s suggestions. Alternatively, do you think the IRS would have any issues here? Comment on your thoughts.
No Sources use their own words.
Skip the dorm, buy your kid a condo
Published: May 14, 2012 at 12:01 a.m. ET
By Bill Bischoff
Prices in many real estate markets may be close to bottoming out. We hope. So the adage about buying low may be something to consider if you have a kid who will soon be heading off to college. The idea is to buy a condo for the kid to live in while attending school. That way, you’ll avoid paying through the nose for a dorm room or apartment with no hope of profit. And if you buy a condo with some extra space, you can rent it out to your kid’s friends and offset some of the ownership cost.
Many parents have made good money by following this strategy for the four or five or, God forbid, six years their kids spent in college and then selling the condo after graduation. Of course, the longer you can hold onto the property, the better the odds of cashing out for a profit. The other key factor to consider is the tax benefits. Here’s what you need to know.
Deducting college condo ownership expenses
The tax rules generally prevent you from deducting losses incurred from owning and renting out a residence used more than a little bit by you or a member of your immediate family. However, a favorable exception applies when you rent at market rates to a family member who uses the property as their principal home. In this case, you can deduct tax losses from the rental activity (subject to the passive loss rules, which I’ll explain later). This beneficial loophole is open for you if you buy a condo and rent it out to your college-going child (and roomies, if any) at market rates.
You can deduct the mortgage interest and real estate taxes. If you pay mortgage points, you can amortize them over the loan term. You can also write off all the other operating expenses—like utilities, insurance, association fees, repairs and maintenance, etc. As a bonus, you can depreciate the cost of the building (not the land) over 27.5 years, even while it is (we hope) increasing in value.
So where will your poverty-stricken son or daughter get the money to pay you market rent for the condo? The same place they would get the cash to pay for a dorm room or an apartment rented from some third party. In other words, from you! You can give your kid up to $13,000 annually without any adverse federal tax consequences. If you’re married, you and your spouse can give up to $26,000 together. Your child can use that money to write you monthly rent checks. Just make sure they send the checks and say they are for rent. Also, it’s best to open a separate checking account to handle the rental income and expenses. These simple steps will help keep the IRS off your back if you ever get audited.
Passive loss rules may postpone tax losses.
If the condo throws off annual tax losses (which it probably will after counting depreciation deductions), the passive activity loss (PAL) rules generally apply. The fundamental PAL concept goes like this: you can only deduct passive losses to the extent you have passive income from other sources -like positive taxable income from other rental properties you own or gains from selling them. Fortunately, a special exception says you can deduct up to $25,000 of annual passive losses from rental real estate provided: (1) your annual adjusted gross income (before the real estate loss) is under $100,000 and (2) you “actively participate” in the rental activity. Active participation means being energetic enough to at least make management decisions like approving tenants, signing leases, and authorizing repairs. You don’t have to mop the floor or snake out the drains.
If you qualify for this exception, you won’t need any passive income from other sources to claim a deductible rental loss of up to $25,000 annually (your loss probably won’t be that big). Unfortunately, if your adjusted gross income (AGI) is between $100,000 and $150,000, the special exception gets proportionately phased out. So at AGI of $125,000, you can deduct no more than $12,500 of passive rental real estate losses each year (half the normal $25,000 maximum). If your AGI exceeds $150,000 and you have no passive income, you can’t deduct any rental real estate losses. However, any disallowed losses are carried forward to future tax years, and you can deduct them when you sell the college condo. This is not a bad tax outcome, as long as your losses are mostly of the “paper” variety from noncash depreciation write-offs.
Favorable tax rules when you sell
When you sell rental real estate that you’ve owned for over a year, the profit—the difference between sales proceeds and the tax basis of the property after subtracting depreciation—is long-term capital gain. However, part of the gain—the amount equal to your cumulative depreciation write-offs—can be taxed at a maximum federal rate of 25%. The rest of the gain will be taxed at a maximum federal rate of no more than 15% under the current rules (which I hope will be extended to post-2012 years).
Remember those passive carryover losses that we talked about earlier? You get to use them to offset any gain from selling the condo.