July
'07
REAL
ESTATE INVESTORS BEWARE:
THE
DEPRECIATION RECAPTURE TAX TRAP PART 2
In
this edition of the Real Estate Revolution, we will provide our readers
with an understanding of depreciation.
Wow!
The recently passed tax law just lowered the capital gain tax rate
to 15%... great, uh? Well yes, but not so fast! We all know how important
it is to understand how the tax law affects our real estate investments.
Understanding and forecasting the tax ramifications of rental property
ownership is a critical step in the screening and decision making
process. Misunderstanding and misapplying the tax law during your
analysis can result in ghastly surprises.
As
a real estate investor, you can depreciate our rental property and
enjoy the positive cash flow resulting from write-off of tax depreciation.
Tax depreciation helps shelter rental income that is subject to "ordinary
income" rates which is generally higher than capital gain rates. The
depreciation taken reduces our property's tax basis, which effectively
increases our tax gain when we later sell. If the property is later
sold at a gain, this gain may have resulted from the depreciation
previously taken. To the extent the gain is attributable to depreciation
taken, this gain is generally referred to as "recapture", or Internal
Revenue Code (IRC) Section 1250 gain.
The
Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 imposed a 25% capital gains tax rate for
unreceptive IRC Section 1250 gains. When coupled with the changes
made by the 2003 Tax Act, all depreciation taken can give rise to
a higher rate of tax than the newly reduced 15% long-term gain rate.
The effect of which is that you will most likely pay more tax upon
the sale of a rental property than the 15%.
By
way of example, let's assume you purchase a rental property today
for $100,000. The total tax depreciation you plan to take over your
estimated ownership period is $25,000. You also project the property
will be worth $140,000 when it is time to exit your investment. Your
projected tax gain will be $65,000 ($140,000 less $75,000 ($100,000
cost less $25,000 depreciation)). Since your gain is greater than
your accumulated tax depreciation, the recapture rule will apply.
As a result, your tax on sale is not $9,750 ($65,000 x 15%), but rather
$12,250, 25.6% more in taxes than what you planned!
The
amount subject to the higher (25% or ordinary) rates is limited to
the gain on the Sec. 1250 property. If the gain is allocable primarily
to the land, the rate of tax on the overall gain from sale may be
brought back toward the lower 15% long-term rate. The consequences
could range from no benefit for buildings, which have increased in
value above their original acquisition basis, to significant benefit
where a building is close to the point of being demolished, the principal
value component being the land.
In summary, make sure you take into consideration the potential depreciation
recapture tax bite when performing your cash flow and rate-of-return
analysis.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Adding insult to injury, ALL transaction wherein
the investor have depreciated their property, the taxman will expect
to receive Self Employment taxes of 15.3% on the first $97,500 of
income received by the investor. Depreciation is truly a tax trap
for the unwary.