No, not if the home is your personal residence at the time of sale. A loss on a personal residence is not deductible. It cannot be used to offset any type of gains, ordinary or capital in nature.
No.
The question is not whether the home was a primary residence, but whether the home was used for personal purposes. It doesn't matter if it was a primary residence, secondary residence, summer cottage, weekend retreat or whatever. If you used it for personal use, loss is not deductible. Since you say it was a rental property, it was not a personal use property. So you can take a capital loss if it applies. But in determining if you had a loss remember that you have to account for depreciation you took (or could have taken) when you owned it. If you failed to properly claim a capital loss in 2005, you need to hurry. The deadline for almost everyone to file an amended 2005 return and get a refund is April 15, 2009, which is about a week and a half from now. You cannot claim the original loss on your 2008 return. You have to file an amended 2005 return to do it.
Most states do allow this, provided the merchandise you sell is under a certain dollar amount per year. The same rules apply for yardsales.
You will never be able to take a loss for the decrease in value during the time it was a personal use property. At best, you'll be able to take a loss for any further decrease in value after you convert it to a rental property. It is very important that you get an appraisal at the time you convert it. If you sell it for a loss, your basis for determining a loss will be the lesser of the following two numbers: 1) The FMV of the property on day it was converted to rental use minus depreciation allowed or allowable. 2) The original adjusted basis of the property minus depreciation allowed or allowable. On the other hand, your basis for determining a gain will be the original adjusted basis minus depreciation allowed or allowable. If you have a gain use the loss basis and a loss using the gain basis, then your gain is considered to be zero.
No, not if the home is your personal residence at the time of sale. A loss on a personal residence is not deductible. It cannot be used to offset any type of gains, ordinary or capital in nature.
No.
It is NOT best. But if there is an urgent need for capital to buy fresh inventory and current inventory is not selling, some businesses will take the loss.
Not from current Income. But it can setoff the Capital Gains and hence Capital gains tax.
can I sell my home and take use of prop 13 on another home in the los angeles county?
The question is not whether the home was a primary residence, but whether the home was used for personal purposes. It doesn't matter if it was a primary residence, secondary residence, summer cottage, weekend retreat or whatever. If you used it for personal use, loss is not deductible. Since you say it was a rental property, it was not a personal use property. So you can take a capital loss if it applies. But in determining if you had a loss remember that you have to account for depreciation you took (or could have taken) when you owned it. If you failed to properly claim a capital loss in 2005, you need to hurry. The deadline for almost everyone to file an amended 2005 return and get a refund is April 15, 2009, which is about a week and a half from now. You cannot claim the original loss on your 2008 return. You have to file an amended 2005 return to do it.
You can if you sell at a loss. Problem is that if you make $10,000 profit, you pay tax on it all in one year. If you lose $10k, you can only write off about $3,000 per year so it will take you 4 tax years to write off that kind of loss. Been there, did that.
It means to remove. It also refers to restaurants who will sell you a meal which you can take home to eat.
Take the mobile home back and sell it.
Because you would not be able to take care of yourself and your home. You need "assistance".
Home loans for people who live in Canada. Canadians can apply online for a mortgage loan or a home equity loan from the Capital Direct website. The applications take just 4 minutes.
Yes, spas commonly sell a range of beauty products to take with you. It's especially common to see them sell their own special brand of products in order to make money.