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February 18, 2025
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Why does TT count sale of inherited home sold for loss as nondeductible on form 8949?

  • February 18, 2025
  • 1 reply
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The inherited property was sold for less than FMV, never occupied, not used to produce income, and was sold to a random/unrelated party shortly after close of probate. TT adds code "F" in column (f) in section II on page 2, which makes the loss nondeductible. Why is the transaction nondeductible? (All research so far seems to indicate the loss is deductible in this situation. How can I make TT fill form 8949 differently??)

    Best answer by mglauner

    Yes, go in through the Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds link and choose Other from the Dropdown list.

     

    This will be reported as an Investment Loss, rather than a loss on the sale of Personal Property (which is not deductible).

     

    You don't actually enter your 1099-S, just the proceeds from it, but save it and record of any other closing costs you incur.

     

    Here's more info on Sale of Inherited Home. 

     

    @brookh 

     

     

     

     

     

    1 reply

    February 18, 2025

    If you selected "Second home," "Land (personal use)," or "Personal items" the loss is not deductible.

     

    In TurboTax you would  report it as investment sale.

    1. Since you did not receive a 1099-B, answer “no” to the 1099-B question or select skip Import 
    2. Select Other for What type of investment did you sell?
    3. Select I inherited for How did you receive this investment? 

    The basis of property inherited from a decedent is generally one of the following:

     

    You can deduct the selling expenses from the gross proceed.

     Sales expenses include:

    • commissions
    • appraisal fees
    • broker's fees
    • legal fees
    • advertising fees
    • home inspection reports
    • title insurance
    • transfer taxes or fees
    • geological surveys
    • loan charges (points) or other fees paid on the buyer's behalf
    • any fees for a service that helped you sell your home without a broker (listing fees, promotional fliers, etc.)

     

    **Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
    brookhAuthor
    February 18, 2025

    Thank you for your response.

     

    I received a 1099-S Form, so I entered it in TurboTax that way:

    • Income screen > click the "Add investments" button
    • "Let's import your tax info" screen: click "Enter a different way" button
    • "OK, let's start with one investment type" screen: click "Other"/"1099-S" button [image]

     

    I entered the information requested, which resulted in form 8949 being filled with the "L" code in Part II column (f).

     

    So, are you saying I should have selected "Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds"/"1099-B, 3922, 3921" button? 

    mglaunerAnswer
    February 18, 2025

    Yes, go in through the Stocks, Bonds, Mutual Funds link and choose Other from the Dropdown list.

     

    This will be reported as an Investment Loss, rather than a loss on the sale of Personal Property (which is not deductible).

     

    You don't actually enter your 1099-S, just the proceeds from it, but save it and record of any other closing costs you incur.

     

    Here's more info on Sale of Inherited Home. 

     

    @brookh