Thursday, June 18, 2009

The Benefit of Income Property Tax Shelter

One real benefit associated with income property ownership is tax shelter. Thanks to the tax code, a real estate investment can shelter some of its own income from taxation and occasionally shelter income received from other investment sources as well. It is one of the true benefits of income property ownership: the ability to tax shelter income. In this article, we will introduce you to and discuss two allowable deductions for real estate investment properties that provide tax shelter. Mortgage interest is the first of these deductions. The Feds allow you to deduct the interest you pay on the mortgage you obtained to purchase the rental property. The benefit to real estate investors is that interest is really a cost associated with acquisition of property rather than operating it, and the argument can be made that tenants really pay the mortgage interest for the real estate investor. Depreciation deduction (or cost recovery) is a second source of tax shelter. In this case, the IRS allows you to assume that the buildings (not the land) are wearing out over time and becoming less valuable, and as such permit you to take a deduction for that presumed decline in the value of your asset. Okay, with that in mind, let's look at what's great about real estate depreciation. Depreciation is a non-cash tax shelter deduction. In full compliance with the tax code, you get a deduction that is not an operating expense and therefore does not affect your cash flow. But there's more. Besides shielding some or all of your property's year-to-year income from taxation, in some cases when the depreciation deduction exceeds the amount needed to shelter the property's own income it can provide tax shelter for other investment income as well. Though a simple formula for the tax shelter component of a real estate investment does not exist, here's the idea. Income less Operating Expenses = Net Operating Income Then, Net Operating Income less Mortgage Interest less Depreciation (Cost Recovery) = Taxable Income Example: Let's say you own an income-producing property that generates rental income of $48,000 and operating expenses of $19,200, leaving a net operating income of $28,800. To calculate your taxable income, you would then deduct your mortgage interest and allowable depreciation from the net operating income. Unless you have an interest-only loan, your mortgage payments are made up of both interest and principal. Only the interest portion is deductible, which we will say is $17,559. The actual amount of depreciation that can be taken depends on several factors: The useful life of the buildings as specified in the tax code, which is currently 27.5 years for residential property and 39 years for nonresidential property, and the percent of the investment real estate allocated to buildings and land. Only buildings can be depreciated, and for our purposes, we'll say that the deductible amount for depreciation is $10,037. Here's the calculation: $28,800 ? 17,559 ? 10,037 = $1,204 In other words, you must pay Federal income tax on a taxable income of $1,204. There are other components to tax shelter. For instance, you can typically depreciate capital additions over the same useful life, starting when they are placed in service. You are allowed to amortize closing costs associated with the acquisition of an investment property over the same useful life. And you can amortize loan points over the number of months of the loan term and write them off. We kept it simple just to give you the idea of how tax shelter is associated with real estate investment and how it can benefit income property ownership. Hopefully, it helps. Here's to your real estate investing success.

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