Home Offices
If you have used part of your home as a home office, you haven't
been using that part of your home as a principal residence at the
same time. Fortunately, you don't need to allocate the basis of the
property and the amount realized between the business portion of the
home and the residential portion. However, gain must be recognized
to the extent of claimed depreciation.
The rule is different
when a separate part of the property was used for business purposes
or rental income. For example, this situation would occur if the individual
owned an apartment building and lived in one unit and rented out the
other units. Generally, if the separate part of the property is used
for business or rental purposes in the year of sale, the individual
must treat the sale of the property as the sale of two properties
(i.e., a residence and business or rental property). The sale of the
business or rental portion of the property is reported on Form 4797, Sales
of Business Property.
|
Example Bob Bruhaha sold his main home in 2014
at a $30,000 gain. He meets the ownership and use tests to exclude
the gain from his income. However, he used part of the home as a business
office in 2013 and claimed $500 depreciation. Because the business
office was part of his home (not separate from it), he does not have
to allocate the basis and amount realized between the business part
of the property and the part used as a home. In addition, he does
not have to report any part of the gain on Form 4797. Bob
reports his gain, exclusion, and taxable gain of $500 on Form 8949
and Schedule D (Form 1040). |
|
© 2024 Wolters Kluwer. All Rights Reserved.