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Results (6,217+)
Andres Piedra Tenant paying full year rent in one payment
10 September 2020 | 57 replies
It would really be nice if you could share some of your reasoning behind the vast majority of your statements as they are out of the ordinary to say it nicely and if you have some logic behind them it would be very helpful to the community.
Daniel Rodriguez Rental property and segmented depreciation
4 April 2013 | 4 replies
I am reporting loss of the depreciation left as ordinary loss.
Fred Stevenson Allowable tax deductions
14 November 2014 | 12 replies
The difference between an active investor and real estate professional is the amount of tax losses you can deduct against your ordinary income.
Tami R. Ready set... CAPITAL GAINS ?'s
4 December 2008 | 20 replies
If you do get classified as a dealer (and, if you do multiple flips, you will), the calculation is identical, because the houses are inventory, and the income is ordinary income.An s-corp may be able to help with the SET.
Brandon Schlichter LLC or S-Corp for Rentals?
9 February 2008 | 6 replies
I imagine that will also prevent the IRS from potentially classifying the refinance as an ordinary sale and taxing 15%.
Sean O. Is there a max on mortgage interest you can write off taxes?
25 July 2007 | 6 replies
You should end up with a positive cash flow, but an ordinary loss on paper (and your tax return)!
N/A N/A Selling Commercial Bldg to our C Corp
30 July 2007 | 2 replies
That means you will not get capital gain treatment on the sale, it will be ordinary income.
Bart Libsock subdivision
14 December 2017 | 9 replies
You're going to pay ordinary income plus.  
Richard Parker LLC's - sorry if this has been asked someplace else
22 March 2016 | 1 reply
You will pay ordinary income tax rates on the depreciation recapture and you will be allowed to take capital gain treatment on the gain not from depreciation recapture if there is any.
Tino Julian LLC - Disregarded Entity vs. Corp. or S-Corp.
18 August 2016 | 4 replies
Reason being that as long as net profits are less than $50,000, the tax rate is 15% which can be much lower than your ordinary rate in which S-Corp, LLC, and partnership income are all subject to.