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October 9, 2023
Question

Repair expenses for a rental converted to personal use

  • October 9, 2023
  • 1 reply
  • 0 views

I purchased a house with a tenant in it, whose lease I had to assume. I rented the unit to the tenant for six weeks. The tenant moved out and left the unit in poor condition. I spent the next six weeks repairing it (deep cleaning, patching, sanding, painting, refinishing the floors). Then I moved in, and it became my primary residence.

 

What, if any, repair expenses can I deduct? All of the expenses were incurred after the tenant moved out and while I was preparing the unit to become my personal residence. Yet, most of the expenses were only necessary because of damage done by the tenant. It was not in rentable condition when they moved out.

 

Also, how do I account for the days in between the tenant leaving and me moving in (six weeks when the house was vacant and being repaired)? Are those days considered personal use?

    1 reply

    Employee
    October 9, 2023

    If you took the house out of service as a rental (with a view toward converting to personal use) then, technically, you cannot deduct the cost of repairs, maintenance, et al.

    October 9, 2023

    That seems so unreasonable to me. If you're just returning the unit to the state it was in before the tenant damaged it, shouldn't that be a rental expense?

    October 10, 2023

    I don't think this would change Tagteam's correct answer, but of curiosity, did the damage happen AFTER you bought the home?

     

    If the damage happened before you bought the home, it seems unreasonable to purchase a house and expect to deduct costs to improve it to be better than when you bought it.   Most likely you would have paid a discounted rate for the home if it was already damaged.