Skip to content
×
PRO
Pro Members Get Full Access!
Get off the sidelines and take action in real estate investing with BiggerPockets Pro. Our comprehensive suite of tools and resources minimize mistakes, support informed decisions, and propel you to success.
Advanced networking features
Market and Deal Finder tools
Property analysis calculators
Landlord Command Center
$0
TODAY
$69.00/month when billed monthly.
$32.50/month when billed annually.
7 day free trial. Cancel anytime
Already a Pro Member? Sign in here

Join Over 3 Million Real Estate Investors

Create a free BiggerPockets account to comment, participate, and connect with over 3 million real estate investors.
Use your real name
By signing up, you indicate that you agree to the BiggerPockets Terms & Conditions.
The community here is like my own little personal real estate army that I can depend upon to help me through ANY problems I come across.
Goals, Business Plans & Entities
All Forum Categories
Followed Discussions
Followed Categories
Followed People
Followed Locations
Market News & Data
General Info
Real Estate Strategies
Landlording & Rental Properties
Real Estate Professionals
Financial, Tax, & Legal
Real Estate Classifieds
Reviews & Feedback

Updated almost 7 years ago, 01/09/2018

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts

Rent your primary home from your own business entity?

Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Posted

Not sure if I picked the right category for posting my question. But I recently heard of an idea of renting your primary home from your own business entity. Let's say I want to buy a new house to live in, can I set up an LLC to make this purchase and treat my own entity as my landlord with a real lease and everything.

I can then depreciate this property and do all kids of tax write off. Is it a crazy idea, or even legal for that matter ?

User Stats

10,239
Posts
16,090
Votes
Steve Vaughan#1 Personal Finance Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • East Wenatchee, WA
16,090
Votes |
10,239
Posts
Steve Vaughan#1 Personal Finance Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • East Wenatchee, WA
Replied

Most of the time, over-sophisticating things only leads to a mess and indigestion.

Doing this will take away your right to a tax-free 121 gain when you sell your primary, and I don't see any tax benefits anyway.  By the time your entity pays the mortgage that's in your name from rent you are paying to it.... 

Something simple to do would be to have your entity rent your house from you for 14 days or less per calendar year.  That rent doesn't need to be reported as far as I know.  

Check with a tax pro before doing something either way @Lana Lee

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Replied
Originally posted by @Steve Vaughan:

Most of the time, over-sophisticating things only leads to a mess and indigestion.

Doing this will take away your right to a tax-free 121 gain when you sell your primary, and I don't see any tax benefits anyway.  By the time your entity pays the mortgage that's in your name from rent you are paying to it.... 

Something simple to do would be to have your entity rent your house from you for 14 days or less per calendar year.  That rent doesn't need to be reported as far as I know.  

Check with a tax pro before doing something either way @Lana Lee

 What benefits would your scenario give me? I am just very new and learning things as I go.

BiggerPockets logo
BiggerPockets
|
Sponsored
Find an investor-friendly agent in your market TODAY Get matched with our network of trusted, local, investor friendly agents in under 2 minutes

User Stats

17,298
Posts
29,819
Votes
Russell Brazil
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington, D.C.
29,819
Votes |
17,298
Posts
Russell Brazil
Agent
  • Real Estate Agent
  • Washington, D.C.
ModeratorReplied

@Lana Lee when you own your primary residence, and it goes up in value, you do not pay any taxes on it up to a gain of $250,000 for a single person and up to $500,000 for a married couple if you have lived in the property for 2 out of the last 5 years.  That is section 121 of the tax code. It is perhaps the single greatest tax break available.  The benefits of that outweigh nearly any other scenario.

business profile image
District Invest Group
5.0 stars
44 Reviews

User Stats

10,239
Posts
16,090
Votes
Steve Vaughan#1 Personal Finance Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • East Wenatchee, WA
16,090
Votes |
10,239
Posts
Steve Vaughan#1 Personal Finance Contributor
  • Rental Property Investor
  • East Wenatchee, WA
Replied

 An expense to an active income entity without income to report on the other end.  In theory I could have my property mgt s-corp (which manages my portfolio- all rents are paid to it) rent my house at air bnb rates for 13 1/2 days a year.  I would get to deduct the rental expense from my s-corp's income but don't have to report the rental income I receive because I've rented my house out for a total of 14 days or less.  

I don't see how it would work though with an LLC that just owns a rental. My example is for an entity that has actively earned income. Be sure to run all my bad advice by a tax pro ;)

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Replied
Originally posted by @Russell Brazil:

@Lana Lee when you own your primary residence, and it goes up in value, you do not pay any taxes on it up to a gain of $250,000 for a single person and up to $500,000 for a married couple if you have lived in the property for 2 out of the last 5 years.  That is section 121 of the tax code. It is perhaps the single greatest tax break available.  The benefits of that outweigh nearly any other scenario.

 Thank you for sharing your knowledge !

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Replied
Originally posted by @Steve Vaughan:

 An expense to an active income entity without income to report on the other end.  In theory I could have my property mgt s-corp (which manages my portfolio- all rents are paid to it) rent my house at air bnb rates for 13 1/2 days a year.  I would get to deduct the rental expense from my s-corp's income but don't have to report the rental income I receive because I've rented my house out for a total of 14 days or less.  

I don't see how it would work though with an LLC that just owns a rental. My example is for an entity that has actively earned income. Be sure to run all my bad advice by a tax pro ;)

 Interesting idea, I will check it out .

Thank you

User Stats

298
Posts
232
Votes
Jeshua Patrick
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Charlotte, NC
232
Votes |
298
Posts
Jeshua Patrick
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Charlotte, NC
Replied

Lana Lee I see little to no real advantage to doing this unless your CPA says otherwise. As several others stated, you would lose the section 121 exclusion capabilities forcing you to either 1031x in the event of future sale or pay capital gains taxes if a gain is realized. Also, you would have to report the rent as personal income which could hurt you; however, one possible benefit would be the ability to write off repairs and updates to the property as well as losses if you incurred any on the property.

I would talk to your CPA as well as a tax attorney first though because if you did this and got audited the IRS may deem this self-dealing and hit you with all sorts of penalties and interest or worse. You don’t want that! I should know. I’ve been on the wrong end of the IRS before due to bad tax advice from a well meaning family member when I was young. It took a long time and a lot of money to get back right.

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Replied
Originally posted by @Jeshua Patrick:

Lana Lee I see little to no real advantage to doing this unless your CPA says otherwise. As several others stated, you would lose the section 121 exclusion capabilities forcing you to either 1031x in the event of future sale or pay capital gains taxes if a gain is realized. Also, you would have to report the rent as personal income which could hurt you; however, one possible benefit would be the ability to write off repairs and updates to the property as well as losses if you incurred any on the property.

I would talk to your CPA as well as a tax attorney first though because if you did this and got audited the IRS may deem this self-dealing and hit you with all sorts of penalties and interest or worse. You don’t want that! I should know. I’ve been on the wrong end of the IRS before due to bad tax advice from a well meaning family member when I was young. It took a long time and a lot of money to get back right.

 Yes! Don't mess with IRS! I hear you. Thank you !

User Stats

2,186
Posts
2,095
Votes
Mike H.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Manteno, IL
2,095
Votes |
2,186
Posts
Mike H.
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Manteno, IL
Replied

I'm guessing that it would allow your business to give yourself cash from the business without having to pay any taxes on it? Your business would report as an expense but you, personally would not have to report as income? Seems fraught with risking a big red flag to do something like that.

At the end of the day, the IRS may just look at the situation and clear it up for you. This is your primary residence. Done. Any games you played with "renting" to yourself are null and void and you are now responsible for reimbursing uncle same for any unpaid taxes plus penalties - plus they're going to go thru the rest of your stuff with a fine toothed comb.

That being said, there was always a big advantage to having your home count as your primary residence anyway - you could sell it and not pay any taxes on the profit (deferred or otherwise).

But now that they limited the SALT deductions, that may change. 

Then again, I'm seeing some of these states that are taking the brunt of that hit getting creative already.  The states are going to let people "donate" an amount to some state charitable operation fund and deduct that donation against their income and/or property taxes.

That will basically allow an individual to pay their property and income taxes to a qualified charity so that they can turn around and deduct that full amount on their federal return.

Example: Individual pays 15k in state income taxes and 8k in property taxes. Under the new tax plan, those people are limited to a 10k deduction in total for those amounts.

However, under the states' plans, they would be allowed to donate 23k to some state charitable fund and the state would then offset that payment in full against both income and property taxes. And the individual would then be able to deduct the full 23k on their federal return.

Seems shady to be sure as the states are basically going to give their residents a way to cheat the federal govt on what their perceived tax caps were supposed to limit. But thats what happens when you pass something that essentially targets only a handful of states (that tend to all be affiliated with the opposing party no less).

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Replied
Originally posted by @Mike H.:I'm guessing that it would allow your business to give yourself cash from the business without having to pay any taxes on it? Your business would report as an expense but you, personally would not have to report as income? Seems fraught with risking a big red flag to do something like that.At the end of the day, the IRS may just look at the situation and clear it up for you. This is your primary residence. Done. Any games you played with "renting" to yourself are null and void and you are now responsible for reimbursing uncle same for any unpaid taxes plus penalties - plus they're going to go thru the rest of your stuff with a fine toothed comb.That being said, there was always a big advantage to having your home count as your primary residence anyway - you could sell it and not pay any taxes on the profit (deferred or otherwise).But now that they limited the SALT deductions, that may change. Then again, I'm seeing some of these states that are taking the brunt of that hit getting creative already.  The states are going to let people "donate" an amount to some state charitable operation fund and deduct that donation against their income and/or property taxes.That will basically allow an individual to pay their property and income taxes to a qualified charity so that they can turn around and deduct that full amount on their federal return.Example: Individual pays 15k in state income taxes and 8k in property taxes. Under the new tax plan, those people are limited to a 10k deduction in total for those amounts.However, under the states' plans, they would be allowed to donate 23k to some state charitable fund and the state would then offset that payment in full against both income and property taxes. And the individual would then be able to deduct the full 23k on their federal return.Seems shady to be sure as the states are basically going to give their residents a way to cheat the federal govt on what their perceived tax caps were supposed to limit. But thats what happens when you pass something that essentially targets only a handful of states (that tend to all be affiliated with the opposing party no less).

I Need a minute here to digest. Let me read couple or more times:-)


User Stats

3,969
Posts
2,919
Votes
Matt K.
  • Walnut Creek, CA
2,919
Votes |
3,969
Posts
Matt K.
  • Walnut Creek, CA
Replied

You realize that if you were to sell it you'd have taxes AND recapture of that depreciation you took advantage of earlier?

User Stats

364
Posts
109
Votes
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
109
Votes |
364
Posts
Lana Lee
  • Philadelphia, pa
Replied
Originally posted by @Matt K.:

You realize that if you were to sell it you'd have taxes AND recapture of that depreciation you took advantage of earlier?

 I was hoping never to sell, I guess:-)

Vacasa logo
Vacasa
|
Sponsored
We do the work. You get the ROI. We do it all for your vacation rental. All—marketing, pricing, guest requests, housekeeping & more.

User Stats

3,969
Posts
2,919
Votes
Matt K.
  • Walnut Creek, CA
2,919
Votes |
3,969
Posts
Matt K.
  • Walnut Creek, CA
Replied
Originally posted by @Lana Lee:
Originally posted by @Matt K.:

You realize that if you were to sell it you'd have taxes AND recapture of that depreciation you took advantage of earlier?

 I was hoping never to sell, I guess:-)

 Well in that case you can't depreciate for ever either lol...