Buying A Home
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Those with rental properties: tax question

We tried to sell our condo between February and August of 2011, but couldn't, so we rented it out to tenants when we moved into our new house.

Typically, we do our own income taxes using Turbo Tax--have been using it successfully for years. Now that we have the rental property, I'm wondering if we need to spring for a professional to do them for us. I know Turbo Tax has a module that includes entering info for rental properties, and ours seems simple enough (income = monthly rent; expenses = mortgage, HOA fee, taxes, and landlord insurance).

But if you have rental property, what have you done about taxes? Do you do your taxes yourself with something like Turbo Tax, or do you go to a professional?

Re: Those with rental properties: tax question

  • We go to the professionals :)
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  • imageheatherkj:

    Typically, we do our own income taxes using Turbo Tax--have been using it successfully for years. Now that we have the rental property, I'm wondering if we need to spring for a professional to do them for us. I know Turbo Tax has a module that includes entering info for rental properties, and ours seems simple enough (income = monthly rent; expenses = mortgage, HOA fee, taxes, and landlord insurance).

    Not a landlord but a CPA.  I think if you are comfortable Turbo Tax for rental properties is an excellent tool to use.  I highlighted mortgage above and wanted to clarify becuase it's a common misconception that you can deduct your mortgage payment (I always read on here that people "break even" or are "renting for a loss" by taking rent prices less mortgage payment).  You can't deduct your whole mortgage cost.  You get to deduct the mortgage interest for the time that it was a "rental property". You do depreciate the property which typically leads to a rental tax loss which is limited depending on your income. 

    Sorry you are landlords by default.  Hopefully you get good tenants until the market recovers and you can sell if you want.  

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  • I do my own taxes with Turbo Tax. The program does a really great job of walking you through what needs to be entered.

    If you're willing to spend the time, you can do a trial run online and enter all of your information. You don't have to pay until you actually file, at the very end. 

    For me, Turbo tax is so easy, fun (I'm weird), and well-worth saving several hundred dollars.

    ETA - get some quotes for a pro job to decide if it's worth it to you. I was quoted well over $600 from all local CPAs I contacted.

  • We've always gone to professionals.  For us, the peace of mind is worth the $200-$300 we pay. 

  • We use a professional to prepare taxes, but we have numerous rental properties. Since you only own 1 rental property, you could more than likely handle taxes yourself. Agree w/pp who suggested getting estimate from professional and see it that works for you.

     

  • We did turbo tax last year and it went fine. The first year is extra-complicated though, you will need to calculate the correct numbers for how many months the house was a rental vs your residence. I'm looking forward to this year's (full year as a rental) being much easier.
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  • We own three rental properties, one in our home state and the other two out of state.

    DH does our taxes himself, using Turbo Tax, every year and other than it being time-consuming it's not a problem.  It helps that he keeps VERY detailed and meticulous records of every.last.penny related to the four homes (including our main residence) so he can run the necessary reports and find what he needs to input pretty quickly.  It would take just as much time to gather the stuff and bring it to a professional, if not more given the need to organize, print or otherwise archive it, and transport everything rather than just look it up on our computer. 

    You can't use the regular version of TT, though...you have to spring for the Premier version. 

  • The first year we had a rental, we went to a CPA. She suggested that Turbo Tax is a really good program and would be easy for us to use since she had already set up all the depreciation tables for us and everything. Since then, we've been using Turbo Tax and it's not that difficult at all. Saves us a few hundred $, and doesn't take all that much time as long as you have all your paperwork/records/receipts in order. But you'd have to have all the paperwork in order if you go to a CPA too, so you're doing that work either way.
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  • OK, thanks everyone. And for the extra information about the mortgage deduction (or lack thereof), and the depreciation factor. If we end up going the Turbo Tax route (I think we will), does TT calculate the depreciation stuff for us? Or is there another tool we can use to do that?
  • I do them myself. I would recommend you do them yourself unless you are sure you will actually get the deduction. The income phaseout is pretty low so a lot of people can't deduct any of it anyway.
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  • Professionals :) I firmly they believe they earn their money. I get more back than I would doing it myself and I have the additional support and backup should there ever be any issues with the IRS. Also, the most commonly audited returns are the ones done by oneself (rather than by a CPA).

    For what it is worth, I have a rental property and I am a Realtor & property manager. :)

    Hope that helps, best of luck!

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  • The great thing about TT is that you don't pay until the end, so you can enter everything and then only submit & pay if you feel good about it.  If, after entering everything, you don't feel confident, take it to a pro.

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