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Employee
June 1, 2019
Solved

Rental property?

  • June 1, 2019
  • 4 replies
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Hi, we purchased a 2nd home 2 months ago to move in to when we sell our primary residence (which has been on the market almost 1 year). Because our home has not sold, we rented it out for the 2016-2017 ski season(6 months). We did some necessary upgrades/repairs. We have only slept in the 2nd home for 2 nights. Can this be considered a rental for just 2016? It is very possible we will move in there permanently in May of 2017 if we sell our home.
How/do we have to declare the income if it not a rental property? We live in NH. Thanks!!!
Best answer by TomYoung

"Can this be considered a rental for just 2016?"

Well, it will be a rental property in for some portion of 2016, and also a rental property in 2017 for the period of time you have it "available to rent", which I assume could be to May of 2017 when you take it off the market and make it your new residence.  Until you made the 2nd home "available to rent" that home would be considered a second residence, assuming you didn't make it available for rent shortly after purchasing it. 

So, depending on the timing of all this, you might report the home as a second residence for some period of time - taking deductions on Schedule A - and as a rental property for some time, reporting income and expenses on Schedule E.  Schedule E reporting will continue for the first part of 2017 until you convert the second home into your primary residence.

Tom Young

4 replies

Employee
June 1, 2019
Are you renting out the old property OR the new property OR both?
bvi1998Author
Employee
June 1, 2019
renting out the new only, just because we have not sold our primary home yet
TomYoungAnswer
Employee
June 1, 2019

"Can this be considered a rental for just 2016?"

Well, it will be a rental property in for some portion of 2016, and also a rental property in 2017 for the period of time you have it "available to rent", which I assume could be to May of 2017 when you take it off the market and make it your new residence.  Until you made the 2nd home "available to rent" that home would be considered a second residence, assuming you didn't make it available for rent shortly after purchasing it. 

So, depending on the timing of all this, you might report the home as a second residence for some period of time - taking deductions on Schedule A - and as a rental property for some time, reporting income and expenses on Schedule E.  Schedule E reporting will continue for the first part of 2017 until you convert the second home into your primary residence.

Tom Young

Employee
June 1, 2019
NH has a Business Profits applies to any landlord who rents at least one property in New Hampshire, and whose total revenues from rental properties everywhere (inside and outside the state) exceed $50,000 in a year.
<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.nhbr.com/May-13-2016/The-tax-implications-of-short-term-rentals-in-NH/">http://www.nhbr.com/May-13-2016/The-tax-implications-of-short-term-rentals-in-NH/</a>