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Vacation Home depreciation limitation

jrbshoes
Level 1

I have a second "home" that I rented for 83 days and used personally for 12 days. The depreciation is not being limited to the business use, but is allowing all the depreciation on Schedule E. When I did a search in ProConnect it said if the number of days of personal use is less than 14 days, or 10% or less of the Number of days rented, depreciation will be allowed in full. This is not my understanding and not consistent with other tax software I have used, which limits depreciation to the business use percentage. Any thoughts?

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itonewbie
Level 15

You're right that §208A(e)(1) mandates that only expenses attributable to rental at fair market value may be deductible where "the taxpayer...uses a dwelling unit for personal purposes on any day during the taxable year (whether or not he is treated under this section as using such unit as a residence)".  In other words, depreciation allowance must still be allocated between rental and personal use even though the taxpayer used the property for less than the thresholds defined under subsection (d)(1) and the deductions would not be subject to the subsection limitation under subsection (c)(5).

PTO does optimize the allocation of mortgage interest and real estate taxes between Sch A and Sch E so long as the number of days owned is entered.  However, I do see two technical problems in PTO's computation when the taxpayer did not use the property for more than the greater of 14 days or 10% of the days rented at FMV (i.e. when the property does not qualify as a residence/vacation home) -

  1. Mortgage Interest: PTO allocates mortgage interest to Sch A even though the property does not qualify as a residence and the interest paid would not constitute deductible qualified residence interest as defined under §163(h)(4)(A);
  2. Depreciation: PTO does not prorate for rental use but allows full depreciation allowance.  As explained above, there is no technical basis for taking this position.
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22 Comments 22
TaxGuyBill
Level 15
You are right, it is limited to business use.  I suspect that message in the software is trying to say it is not subject to the 'vacation home' limitations.

As for how to get it to use the business percentage, I can't help you there (I use ProSeries, not PTO).  It is possible that you need to manually enter the business percentage on the asset.
itonewbie
Level 15

You're right that §208A(e)(1) mandates that only expenses attributable to rental at fair market value may be deductible where "the taxpayer...uses a dwelling unit for personal purposes on any day during the taxable year (whether or not he is treated under this section as using such unit as a residence)".  In other words, depreciation allowance must still be allocated between rental and personal use even though the taxpayer used the property for less than the thresholds defined under subsection (d)(1) and the deductions would not be subject to the subsection limitation under subsection (c)(5).

PTO does optimize the allocation of mortgage interest and real estate taxes between Sch A and Sch E so long as the number of days owned is entered.  However, I do see two technical problems in PTO's computation when the taxpayer did not use the property for more than the greater of 14 days or 10% of the days rented at FMV (i.e. when the property does not qualify as a residence/vacation home) -

  1. Mortgage Interest: PTO allocates mortgage interest to Sch A even though the property does not qualify as a residence and the interest paid would not constitute deductible qualified residence interest as defined under §163(h)(4)(A);
  2. Depreciation: PTO does not prorate for rental use but allows full depreciation allowance.  As explained above, there is no technical basis for taking this position.
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itonewbie
Level 15
@Intuit Austin @Kathi_at_Intuit Hi, Austin and Kathi, could you please take a look at this as it doesn't seem right?  Thanks!
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Kathi_at_Intuit
Employee
Employee
@itonewbie Let me check on this. It will take a bit.
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itonewbie
Level 15
Thanks, @Kathi_at_Intuit!
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Kathi_at_Intuit
Employee
Employee
I am still checking. It sounds like this is the knowledge base that you are talking about:

Depreciation not limited for Schedule E Vacation Home
https://accountants-community.intuit.com/articles/1741007-depreciation-not-limited-for-schedule-e-va...

I see topic 415 https://www.irs.gov/taxtopics/tc415 that states:

Rental Property / Personal Use

If you rent a dwelling unit to others that you also use as a residence, limitations may apply to the rental expenses you can deduct. You're considered to use a dwelling unit as a residence if you use it for personal purposes during the tax year for more than the greater of:

    14 days, or
    10% of the total days you rent it to others at a fair rental price.

(the above states limitation MAY apply)

and

List publication 527 https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p527.pdf which I did not necessarily see state you could take the depreciation in full.

I also see this, which is from Lacerte, but would still apply to ProConnect Tax Online:

Number of Days Personal Use
Personal Use of Dwelling Unit

Enter the number of days the taxpayer used this property for personal use. Leave this field blank if the taxpayer did not use the property.

If you use a dwelling unit for both rental and personal purposes, the tax treatment of the rental expenses depends on whether you are considered to be using the dwelling unit as a home.

You use a dwelling unit as a home during the tax year if you use it for personal purposes more than the greater of:

1. 14 days, or

2. 10% of the total days it is rented to others at a fair rental price

Note: You must enter at least 15 days personal use, or more than 10% of the days rented, for the program to calculate vacation home expenses. If the taxpayer used the home for fewer than 15 days personal use, or less than 10% of the rental days, enter applicable taxes and interest on Screen 25, Itemized Deductions. See IRS Publication 527 for more information on the rules for vacation homes.

I will see if I am able to find anything else.

itonewbie
Level 15
In this case, the OP's client did use the property, just not for the number of days that exceeded the thresholds for the property to be considered a residence.  That's where the program seems to have a disconnect.
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Kathi_at_Intuit
Employee
Employee
I have not forgotten you. I am still checking on this.
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itonewbie
Level 15
Thanks, @Kathi_at_Intuit!
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Kathi_at_Intuit
Employee
Employee
@itonewbie @Intuit Austin is reporting this to development. After we are updated, we will update you. Thank you all very much for your patience.
itonewbie
Level 15
Will wait to hear back from @Intuit Austin.  Goodnight!
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IntuitAustin
Intuit Alumni
Sorry for the delay on this @itonewbie. It appears that this is inherently a program limitation. The program, as you had described, does not prorate the depreciation amount if the taxpayer did not use the property for more than the greater of 14 days or 10% of the days rented at FMV. Depreciation and any interest that flows to the Sch A would need an overridden in this case.

While I realize program limitations are not ideal, I've submitted some feedback to our development team, so perhaps this feature/calculation can be improved upon.

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itonewbie
Level 15
But @Intuit Austin, this is not a system limitation but a misapplication of tax law and regulations.  Where there are limitations, you'd expect, at the very least, that a notation of some sort or a diagnostic would be produced (in this case, critical) because the return would be wrong, unless manual adjustments are made.  Furthermore, there's nothing complicated about the tax logics involved with this particular code section.

Please do escalate this with your developer and let us know when a diagnostic will be provided, especially if a fix may not be deployed until the next filing season.

Thanks!
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IntuitAustin
Intuit Alumni
I will definitely see what I can do! Thank you for the elaboration @itonewbie!

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itonewbie
Level 15
Thanks, Austin!
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JGCPA2
Level 1

Has anyone found a solution regarding how to get Lacerte to properly allocate depreciation for a vacation home rental that was used for personal use the greater of more that 14 days or 10% of business use?

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dukes01
Level 1

I've encountered the same issue.  After searching many screens and the forums, I decided to contact support and have resolved the issue.  Make sure you have the asset properly coded in screen 22 under the "form" column.  It needs to be listed as 11 (schedule e vacation home) and not 3 (schedule e rental).  Make sure you have the correct activity tagged as well.   

StknCPA
Level 4

Was this resolved?

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qbteachmt
Level 15

@StknCPA 

Right here, you are asking about ProConnect. You also posted about the issue under Lacerte.

I don't know which program you are using.

I used google:

Lacerte vacation home

And find:

https://proconnect.intuit.com/community/federal-taxes/help/entering-a-vacation-home-for-schedule-e/0...

It helps not to post in multiple old topics across programs you are not using. Asking in the topic for the product you are using, or starting your own topic in the forum for the product you are using, would help you get specific help on a specific issue for that specific program.

And not asking in multiple places means the peer volunteers don't have to seek out all the places you asked the same thing.

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StknCPA
Level 4

Good points, and I will try to be more careful. I have found myself accidently posting Proconnect before. I use Lacerte, but it seems to be easy to start there and drift over to other areas.

And I am definitely guilty of posting this in more than one area. I got (and am!) frustrated because I feel like Lacerte is not handling this issue correctly. I have reviewed all the "how to input" answers I can find, and I believe I am inputting as instructed, but I am not getting the results I expect. Now I have doubts that what I am expecting the correct result.

I have to put this down for the day and pick it back up tomorrow.

And, thank you for your worthwhile correction.

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Bhaumik
Level 1

I tried your solution and it didn't work. What I was told by the Lacerte Support is to calculate business percentage manually and enter in the "Percentage of Business Use" under Additional Information of Depreciation Screen. To calculate the biz use percentage, I took total numbers rented divided by total numbers of days rented + days used for personal use. Hope this helps!!

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qbteachmt
Level 15

@Bhaumik 

Did you notice this topic is ProConnect, not Lacerte? Did you follow the link previously given, to the Lacerte article for how this works? Here it is, again:

https://proconnect.intuit.com/community/federal-taxes/help/entering-a-vacation-home-for-schedule-e/0...

 

And here is what Intuit tells you there:

"For vacation home purposes, Lacerte calculates percentage of business use by dividing the number of days rented by the sum of the number of days rented plus the number of days of personal use. The program applies this percentage to all indirect expenses, including indirect mortgage interest and real estate taxes."

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