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Employee
January 11, 2025
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Future 2025 Sale of 100% Rental Property

  • January 11, 2025
  • 1 reply
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My tenant has vacated the property as of Jan 8, 2025 (no rent charged for January 2025).  The property will be listed for sale next week and no longer available for rental.  Purchased in 2013 and depreciated per TT Schedule E.  As of Tax Year 2023, the only depreciation currently taken is the residence and 15% business use of vehicle (placed in service 10/22).  All other assets have zero depreciation after 5 year life such as appliances and flooring. 

 

Based on what I've read - when I do report the sale in 2025, I need to assign a dollar amount of the sales price to each remaining asset.  There are none that I am able to take out of service at this time. 

 

I am assuming that I do nothing differently than every prior year when completing the taxes.  

 

1.  Do I need to take the vehicle out of service/convert to personal use as of 12/31/24?  I will still be using it to maintain the property, etc., until it is sold.  Is the vehicle even deductible at the point where the property is not for rent?

 

2.  Are there any suggestions to make this as uncomplicated as possible for Tax Year 2025?

 

Many thanks for any insight!  

Best answer by KrisD15

Reporting the sale as if it happened in 2024 might not give you an accurate tax total since the treatment of the capital gain will depend on your other income, and the depreciation recapture will be taxed as Ordinary Income.

If everything will be the same, you might try using that as a guess, but there won't be rental income/loss so that might make a difference.

It's also unclear why you were required to pay estimated tax payments for 2024.

 

 

Are you concerned about making estimated payments because of an Underpayment Penalty or are you concerned because you don't want to have to make a large tax payment for 2025?

 

 

If you simply don't want a penalty, according to the IRS:

"You may avoid the Underpayment of Estimated Tax by Individuals Penalty if:

  • Your filed tax return shows you owe less than $1,000 or
  • You paid at least 90% of the tax shown on the return for the taxable year or 100% of the tax shown on the return for the prior year, whichever amount is less. If your adjusted gross income (AGI) for 2023 was more than $150,000 ($75,000 if your filing status for 2024 is married filing separately), substitute 110% for 100%."

I would use the information above to decide if you need to make estimated tax payments. 

If you pay 100% (or 110% if applicable) of your 2024 Tax Liability in 2025, there will not be an underpayment penalty. 

The amount of tax that you must pay in 2025 should be made evenly over the year, or as you earn the income (sell the property). Some of the tax might be paid as withholding if you are a W-2 employee.

 

Let's say your tax liability (Form 1040 Line 24; not simply your payment due) was 20,000. If you pay at least 22,000 in 2025, there will be no penalty. 

 

If you are trying to avoid a large tax payment due with your 2025 return, you'll need to try to figure what the sale will do to your 2025 tax liability by applying your tax rate to the depreciation recapture and then adding the tax for the capital gain to the tax on your other income. 

 

Here is a link from TurboTax with more information. 

1 reply

January 14, 2025

You made it as uncomplicated as you could already!  By not renting the property at all in 2025 you won't have to do a partial year's rental income and expenses.  Depending on when it actually sells you may have to take some depreciation for the year but otherwise it should be pretty smooth sailing.

 

TurboTax will roll the rental property over from 2024 into 2025.  When you go into your 2025 taxes you will tell the system that you sold the property and for how much.  It will assign a value to all of the assets and set up the sale on your return.  

 

As far as the car goes - you will need to report the sale of the car if and when you do sell it.  For this year convert it to personal use.

 

@Benjamine 

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BenjamineAuthor
Employee
January 16, 2025

Many thanks for the info! One follow up question.  As far as making estimated tax payments for 2025 (was required to do so for 2024 for the first time), I know for certain we'll be paying a hefty tax price since the value of the property has at least doubled since purchased in 2010.  I was thinking, after I complete my return and file it, would it be wise to "pretend" I sold the property for the asking price and guestimate closing costs, adjustments to basis, etc., to see what TT reflects as the amount taxable.  My thinking is that would then give me an idea of what I should pay in estimated tax payments. 

 

Does that make sense?  It's my first time selling rental property so pretty ignorant.  I know there's depreciation recapture as well as capital gains.  Or, since 2024 was the first time we had to make estimated payments, do I need to be concerned about guestimating the possible tax liability? 

 

Sure do appreciate any advice! 

KrisD15
KrisD15Answer
January 18, 2025

Reporting the sale as if it happened in 2024 might not give you an accurate tax total since the treatment of the capital gain will depend on your other income, and the depreciation recapture will be taxed as Ordinary Income.

If everything will be the same, you might try using that as a guess, but there won't be rental income/loss so that might make a difference.

It's also unclear why you were required to pay estimated tax payments for 2024.

 

 

Are you concerned about making estimated payments because of an Underpayment Penalty or are you concerned because you don't want to have to make a large tax payment for 2025?

 

 

If you simply don't want a penalty, according to the IRS:

"You may avoid the Underpayment of Estimated Tax by Individuals Penalty if:

  • Your filed tax return shows you owe less than $1,000 or
  • You paid at least 90% of the tax shown on the return for the taxable year or 100% of the tax shown on the return for the prior year, whichever amount is less. If your adjusted gross income (AGI) for 2023 was more than $150,000 ($75,000 if your filing status for 2024 is married filing separately), substitute 110% for 100%."

I would use the information above to decide if you need to make estimated tax payments. 

If you pay 100% (or 110% if applicable) of your 2024 Tax Liability in 2025, there will not be an underpayment penalty. 

The amount of tax that you must pay in 2025 should be made evenly over the year, or as you earn the income (sell the property). Some of the tax might be paid as withholding if you are a W-2 employee.

 

Let's say your tax liability (Form 1040 Line 24; not simply your payment due) was 20,000. If you pay at least 22,000 in 2025, there will be no penalty. 

 

If you are trying to avoid a large tax payment due with your 2025 return, you'll need to try to figure what the sale will do to your 2025 tax liability by applying your tax rate to the depreciation recapture and then adding the tax for the capital gain to the tax on your other income. 

 

Here is a link from TurboTax with more information. 

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