Rental Real Estate and the $25,000 Special Loss Allowance (2024)

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Rental Real Estate and the $25,000 Special Loss Allowance (1)

Generally, a trade or business activity is considered a passive activity if the taxpayer does not materially participate in the activity. This means, passive activity losses may only be deducted from passive activity income and not from nonpassive activity sources of income, such as wages or income from a business you materially participate in.

Rental Real Estate

Since rental real estate activities for real estate nonprofessionals are considered passive activities, even if the taxpayer does materially participate in the activity, losses from such activities are normally not deductible against nonpassive income.

But, there is an exception for small landlords with modified adjusted gross income (MAGI ) under $150,000 ($75,000 if married filing separately) that allows rental losses to be classified as nonpassive losses and deducted from nonpassive income.

Modified adjusted gross income is simply the exclusion of certain items that were included in your adjusted gross income (see below).

Special $25,000 Allowance for Real Estate Nonprofessionals

If you're not a real estate professional, a special rule let's you classify up to $25,000 of rental losses as nonpassive. This means you can deduct up $25,000 of rental losses from your nonpassive income, such as wages, salary, dividends, interest and income from a nonpassive business that you own.

Deduction Limits

If your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) exceeds $100,000 ($50,000 if married filing separately), the $25,000 maximum deduction amount ($12,500 if married filing separately) is reduced by 50% of each dollar over $100,000 ($50,000 if married filing separately).

For example, if your MAGI is $110,000, the maximum $25,000 deduction amount is reduced by $5,000 (50% x $10,000) leaving $20,000 available to deduct.

Once MAGI reaches $150,000 the $25,000 deduction is completely eliminated (50% x $50,000 = $25,000).

Qualifying for the Special Allowance

To qualify for the special allowance you must (a) actively participate in the activity and (b) your interest (including your spouse's interest) must be at least 10% (by value) of all interests in the activity throughout the year.

Married Filing Separately:

The special allowance is not available if you were married, lived with your spouse at any time during the year, and are filing a separate return.

Active Participation:

Active participation is not the same as material participation. Active participation is a less stringent standard and is intended to make it easier for real estate nonprofessionals to qualify for the special $25,000 rental loss deduction. There is no specific hour requirement to meet the active participation test.

However, the taxpayer must be exercising independent judgment and not simply ratifying decisions made by a manager. Merely signing off on what a management agent does or merely reviewing financial statements or conducting analysis that is unrelated to the day-to-day management or operation of the activity is not treated as active participation.

As long as a taxpayer has more than a 10% ownership interest in the property and participates in the property's management decisions in a bona fide sense, the taxpayer is considered to actively participate in the real estate rental activity. For example, approving leases and tenants, setting the rental terms, approving maintenance and repair expenses.

Using a Property Management Company:

Using a property management company will not prevent you from meeting the active participation test as long as you are involved in a significant bona fide sense in the management of the property. For example, you approve leases of prospective tenants, you approve the selection of service vendors provided by the property management company and approve maintenance expenses.

Note that you don't have to keep contemporaneous daily time reports, logs, or similar documents if you can establish your participation in some other way. You or your spouse (if married) may be treated as actively participating if you make management decisions in a significant and bona fide sense.

Finding Your Modified AGI

To figure your modified AGI, combine all the amounts on your IRS Form 1040 that you used to calculate adjusted gross income, except for the following:

  1. Taxable Social Security and tier 1 railroad retirement benefits
  2. Deductible contributions to individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and Section 501(c) (18) pension plans (trust funds by employees only formed prior to June 25, 1959)
  3. The exclusion from income of interest from qualified U.S. savings bonds used to pay qualified higher education expenses
  4. The exclusion from income of amounts received from an employer’s adoption assistance program
  5. Passive activity income or loss included on Form 8582
  6. Any rental real estate loss allowed because you materially participated in the rental activity as a real estate professional
  7. Any overall loss from a publicly traded partnership
  8. The deduction for one-half of self-employment tax
  9. The deduction for domestic production activities
  10. The deduction allowed for interest on student loans
  11. The deduction for qualified tuition and related expenses
Rental Real Estate and the $25,000 Special Loss Allowance (2024)

FAQs

What is the $25,000 rental real estate loss allowance? ›

If you actively participated in a passive rental real estate activity, you may be able to deduct up to $25,000 of loss from the activity from your nonpassive income. This special allowance is an exception to the general rule disallowing losses in excess of income from passive activities.

Does rental property qualify for special depreciation allowance? ›

Qualified Property for Bonus Depreciation

A residential rental property itself does not qualify. But there are several other asset types that you can claim bonus depreciation on. These fall into two main categories: personal property and land improvements.

What is the special allowance for rental loss? ›

The rental real estate tax loss allowance is available only to property owners who actively participate in the management of the property. To meet the active participation test, the taxpayer must make management decisions for the property.

How much of a loss can I take on a rental property? ›

When your income is under a certain threshold, you may qualify for the real estate loss allowance. If your gross adjusted income is $100,000 or less, you may deduct up to $25,000 of rental losses. But for you to use this allowance, you must actively participate in the rental, among other conditions.

What is the 50% rule in rental property? ›

The 50% rule or 50 rule in real estate says that half of the gross income generated by a rental property should be allocated to operating expenses when determining profitability. The rule is designed to help investors avoid the mistake of underestimating expenses and overestimating profits.

Can rental losses offset capital gains? ›

Passive Losses Cannot Ordinarily Offset Capital Gains

Like all forms of investment income, you only pay taxes on your net profits from passive activities. This means that you can use passive losses to offset passive gains, ultimately only paying taxes on the difference.

Why are my rental losses not deductible? ›

Rental Losses Are Passive Losses

This greatly limits your ability to deduct them because passive losses can only be used to offset passive income. They can't be deducted from income you earn from a job or investments such as stock or savings accounts.

What happens if I don't depreciate my rental property? ›

Some investors may be tempted to skip claiming depreciation to avoid the risk of depreciation recapture tax, but this generally won't succeed. The IRS assumes that you have taken a depreciation deduction. You will owe 25 percent of what you could have deducted as a “depreciation recapture” when you sell the property.

What qualifies for 100% bonus depreciation? ›

To be eligible for bonus depreciation, eligible property must be MACRS property with a useful life of 20 years or less, certain depreciable computer software, or qualifying leasehold improvement property.

What is the special allowance of 25000 for real estate passive activities? ›

If your client actively participates in a passive rental real estate activity, then you may be able to deduct up to $25,000 of the loss from nonpassive income. The application limits losses on Form 8582 in accordance with the special $25,000 allowance rules if the property wasn't disposed.

Can rental loss offset regular income? ›

Losses from rental property are considered passive losses and can generally offset passive income only (that is, income from other rental properties or another small business in which you do not materially participate, not including investments).

Can you write off rental income loss? ›

If your rental expenses exceed rental income your loss may be limited. The amount of loss you can deduct may be limited by the passive activity loss rules and the at-risk rules. See Form 8582, Passive Activity Loss Limitations, and Form 6198, At-Risk Limitations, to determine if your loss is limited.

What is the 25k passive loss rule? ›

If you or your spouse actively participated in a passive rental real estate activity, the amount of the passive activity loss that's disallowed is decreased and you therefore can deduct up to $25,000 of loss from the activity from your nonpassive income.

What if my rental expenses exceed my income? ›

For many rental property owners, these expenses far exceed the rental income they receive on the property, creating nice, hefty tax losses. Unfortunately, Congress put up a nasty barrier between you and your rental property losses called the passive loss rules, which reduces the amount you can deduct in any given year.

Can real estate professionals deduct rental losses? ›

Benefits of real estate professional status

They can use rental losses to offset non-passive income. Another benefit of qualifying for real estate professional status is that any rental activities that aren't subject to PAL rules are also not subject to the 3.8% net investment income tax (NIIT).

How do you calculate loss of rental value? ›

The loss to lease calculation is simply the market rent of a unit minus the actual rent. For example, if the market rent for a given unit is $1,000 per month and the actual rent is $900 per month, the loss to lease is $100 per month.

How do you calculate loss on sale of rental property? ›

Calculate the gain or loss on sale: Subtract the selling costs and adjusted cost basis from the sale price. A positive number indicates gains, while a negative number indicates a loss. The amount taxed as capital gains: Subtract the depreciation from any gains to see the taxable sum.

How do you calculate profit or loss on a rental property? ›

The simplest way to calculate ROI on a rental property is to subtract annual operating costs from annual rental income and divide the total by the mortgage value.

What is loss of fair rental value? ›

Fair rental value reimburses you for lost rental income, while additional living expenses pays for your temporary living expenses if you're forced to relocate due to a covered loss.

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