3 Reasons Military Landlords Should Have Their Taxes Professionally Prepared (2024)

3 Reasons Military Landlords Should Have Their Taxes Professionally Prepared

In the military, we often buy a house that becomes a rental property. Whether it’s by design or an "accidental rental," we often keep the house and rent it out. With that decision, we immediately have to make other decisions:

  • How much do we rent it for?
  • Who should live in it?
  • Do we manage it ourselves or hire a professional?

As with a lot of things, we might not know the answers up front. But failure isn’t an option, so we tend to figure it out. Usually on our own.

But when it comes to owning a rental property and figuring out your taxes,you shouldn’t do them on your own. You should hire a tax professional, such as a CPA or enrolled agent, who focuses on tax preparation and tax planning. While you can have your taxes prepared by a service such as H&R Block, you should be aware of two things. First, many tax preparation services share your information with third parties, so be aware of the fine print when you have them do your tax return. Second, tax preparation services do not perform tax planning with their clients. On the other hand, a tax professional should not only help you make sure your tax return is filed properly, but help you minimize your tax bill.

Doing your taxes yourself might save you some money up front. But in the long run, it could cost more than hiring them out to a tax professional, even if you’re used to doing them on your own. Here are three reasons why.

3 Reasons Military Landlords Should Have Their Taxes Professionally Prepared

3 Reasons Military Landlords Should Have Their Taxes Professionally Prepared (1)

Reason #1: Deductions are different under Schedule E.

When you own a house, you might itemize your deductions under Schedule A. If that’s the case, you may be familiar with what is deductible as a homeowner’s expense or what is not. However, when dealing with a rental property, many of these deductions are different.

To properly minimize your tax liability, it’s important to clearly understand those differences. For example, your homeowner’s insurance usually isn’t deductible on Schedule A of your tax return. But insurance on your rental property IS deductible under Schedule E. There are similar differences in the treatment of mortgage interest, real estate taxes, and other expenses. All of these could have an impact on your tax liability, especially if you aren’t aware of them.

One of the most important deductions is depreciation expense. The IRS allows certain property, such as rental real estate, to be depreciated over a certain period. In doing this, the property owner doesn’t pay anything, but is able to lower their taxable income by the depreciation amount. This results in actual cash savings.

On the other hand, when you sell that rental property, the IRS will expect you to ‘recapture’ that depreciation and pay taxes on it. This happens regardless of whether you actually took the depreciation expense deduction while your home was rented out. Therefore, understanding how depreciation is calculated is extremely important.

Reason #2: Calculations can be trickier than expected.

Understanding deductions and properly calculating them are two completely different things. For example, it’s easy to guestimate how much depreciation is. But it’s harder to get the exact figure. Which one would you want to see on your tax return, close enough or exactly right?

Let’s say you’ve got a rental property valued at $275,000. If the IRS allows a depreciation schedule of 27.5 years, then you should be able to deduct $10,000 per year in depreciation ($275,000 ÷27.5), right?

Probably not. If you were deducting the total value of the property, you probably forgot to take out the value of the land. Land doesn't depreciate, so you can’t deduct for that. Then, you’d have to figure out how much value is in the land versus your home. There are many factors that go into properly calculating something as seemingly simple as depreciation.

Of course, tax software has made things a lot more user-friendly. But one thing that hasn’t changed is user error. If you make a mistake, your tax software probably won’t catch it. And you probably won’t catch it either, if you don’t know what to look for.

Fortunately, a professional tax preparer should be able to ask the right questions and get the right information from you. That way, they can properly calculate your tax liability.

Reason #3: You should focus on the highest and best use of your time.

Tax season is at the same time every year. But deployments aren’t. PCS moves aren’t. All those things that you can’t even put on the calendar like exercises, workups, TDY assignments; they happen all the time. Even if you file an extension, you’re going to have to do your taxes at some point.

And when it comes time to do your tax return, are you sure you’re going to be at the top of your game? What happens when you try to deal with everything on your plate AND your taxes? Most likely, your taxes will get short shrift. Not good.

At some point, you must hire some tasks out. You can’t hire out:

  • Managing your PCS move
  • Homecoming preparations
  • Spending a little more time as a family before deployment.

But you can hire your taxes out to an expert who will help you minimize your tax bill.

The highest and best use of your time should be doing all the things that make your military family special. Taxes probably isn’t one of them.

Conclusion

Every military family has significant challenges. When your home becomes a rental property, there are so many decisions to make. Sometimes, you must keep costs as low as possible. But don’t shortchange your taxes. That decision could end up costing you.

Don't miss the first post in this series! How to Know If You'll Pay Taxes When You Sell Your Home

Author bio:Forrest Baumhover retired from a 24-year Navy career to start his own fee-only financial planning firm,Westchase Financial Planning, in Tampa, Florida. In addition to helping clients, Forrest enjoys writing educational articles on a variety of financial topics. Forrest is a Certified Financial Planner™ professional and is an enrolled agent.

3 Reasons Military Landlords Should Have Their Taxes Professionally Prepared (2)

3 Reasons Military Landlords Should Have Their Taxes Professionally Prepared (2024)

FAQs

Can the military avoid depreciation recapture? ›

You Can Defer Depreciation Recapture on Your Military Rental

The 1031 exchange. In a 1031 exchange you exchange your rental property for another rental property and if done correctly, you'll defer taxes on the depreciation recapture and normal capital gains.

Is it better to file your own taxes? ›

Not only is the process usually more efficient than commuting to your tax professional's office, it's often less expensive as well. Depending on the details of your return, you may even be able to file it for free.

What is the 2 in 5 rule for the military? ›

2. For exclusion of gain you need to satisfy (a) 2 out of 5 rule -- two years of ownership and 730 days total of use as main home with a look back period of five years and (b) cannot have claimed this exclusion in the last two years from the date of sale.

What are the pros and cons of tax preparation websites for preparing your taxes? ›

Speed - Filing your taxes online is generally faster than filing with a professional. You can complete your tax return in a matter of hours or even minutes, depending on your situation. Cons: Complexity - Filing your taxes online can be complicated, especially if you have a complex tax situation.

Who should not do their own taxes? ›

For example, if you have only one W-2 and no deductions, the best do-it-yourself tax software may be the way to go. But in other cases, you may need more guidance. If you own a business, sold investments or worked in multiple states in 2022, you may want to hire a tax professional.

Can military avoid capital gains tax on home sale? ›

This means that eligible military members may exclude their capital gains as long as they occupied the primary residence for two of the previous 15 years. There are special limitations for situations in which a homeowner moves back into a previous rental property.

What are the exceptions to depreciation recapture? ›

If the realized gain ends up being negative (a realized loss), there is no depreciation recapture as you sold the item for a loss and will not need to pay income or capital gains taxes. However, if the realized gain is a positive number you will need to pay income tax or capital gains tax on that amount.

Do active duty military have to pay capital gains tax? ›

Active-duty military members have up to 10 years to sell the property, subject to certain restrictions. This means that active-duty military members may be able to exclude capital gains if they have occupied the house for 24 months out of the last 15 years. Moving deductions.

Can military get out of capital gains tax? ›

Extra Time For Military Members

That basically means that a military seller can get the tax exemption from the first $250k or $500k if married if they lived in the home for two of the last 15 years at the very latest (the amount of the original five year period plus 10 additional years maximum).

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