
6 March 2017 | 1 reply
This did not sound right to me, i believe you cannot deduct your "rent" from the income of the property, you are the owner ( unless it's under a corp and you pay rent to the corp - possibly) That is considered your personal residence and all deductions need to be pro rated. here is an article to read: http://finance.zacks.com/tax-deductions-owneroccup...I would consult with a CPA on this, and BTW in your example you would both want to claim $400 so each had full deduction, not $0 for him.

10 March 2017 | 8 replies
There simply isn't enough to go off of at this point in order to make the claim of interest only via amortized as Melissa mentioned above.

6 March 2017 | 6 replies
Also if you only have the main house as a rental and the guest house is your vacation spot you are only allowed to claim depreciation on the cost basis of the main house and the guest house is non-depreciable since it isn't rental property it's personal property.

5 October 2018 | 21 replies
They also stole a few thousand dollars worth of materials when they finally got fired, claiming that the materials were stolen from them.

5 March 2017 | 1 reply
Homeowner's I wouldn't bother filing a claim.

6 March 2017 | 1 reply
Hi all,I was recently introduced to a real estate investment opportunity by an old friend (who claims to be a gap funder/broker).

6 March 2017 | 1 reply
What can I claim?

6 March 2017 | 7 replies
Your claims of any devaluation of the home may have a bigger impact on the result if it is a rental.

13 March 2017 | 16 replies
You cannot claim it as both a payment/expense and as income.

26 April 2017 | 23 replies
If it turns out that the owners did it because of the auction, then it will be insurance fraud and the insurance company won't cover the claim.