How To Report
Rental Income
and Expenses
If you rent buildings, rooms, or apartments, and provide only heat
and light, trash collection, etc., you normally report your rental income and
expenses in Part I of Schedule E (Form 1040). However, do not use that schedule to report
a not-for-profit activity. See Not Rented for Profit, earlier.
If you provide significant services that are
primarily for your tenant's convenience, such as regular cleaning, changing linen,
or maid service, you report your rental income and expenses on Schedule C (Form 1040), Profit
or Loss From Business or Schedule C-EZ, Net Profit From Business (Sole
Proprietorship). Significant services do not include the furnishing of heat and
light, cleaning of public areas, trash collection, etc. For information, see Publication
334, Tax Guide for Small Business (For Individuals Who Use Schedule C or C-EZ). You
also may have to pay self-employment tax on your rental income. See Publication 533, Self-Employment
Tax.
Form 1098. If you paid $600 or
more of mortgage interest on your rental property to any one person, you should receive a
Form 1098, Mortgage Interest Statement, or similar statement showing the
interest you paid for the year. If you and at least one other person (other than your
spouse if you file a joint return) were liable for, and paid interest on the mortgage, and
the other person received the Form 1098, report your share of the interest on line 13 of
Schedule E (Form 1040). Attach a statement to your return showing the name and address of
the other person. In the left margin of Schedule E (Form 1040), next to line 13, write See
attached.
Schedule E (Form 1040)
Use Part I of Schedule E (Form 1040) to report your rental income and
expenses. List your total income, expenses, and depreciation for each rental
property. Be sure to answer the question on line 2.
If you have more than three rental or royalty properties, complete and attach as many
Schedules E as are needed to list the properties. Complete lines 1 and 2 for each
property. However, fill in the Totals column on only one Schedule E. The figures
in the Totals column on that Schedule E should be the combined totals of all
Schedules E.
Page 2 of Schedule E is used to report income or loss from partnerships, S
corporations, estates, trusts, and real estate mortgage investment conduits. If you need
to use page 2 of Schedule E, use page 2 of the same Schedule E you used to enter the
combined totals in Part I.
On page 1, line 20 of Schedule E, enter the
depreciation you are claiming. You must complete and attach Form 4562 for rental
activities only if you are claiming:
- Depreciation on property placed in service during 2002,
- Depreciation on any property that is listed property (such as a car), regardless of when
it was placed in service, or
- Any car expenses (actual or the standard mileage rate).
Otherwise, figure your depreciation on your own worksheet. You do not have to attach
these computations to your return.
Example. On January 1, Justin Cole bought a townhouse and placed
it in service as residential rental property. He receives $1,100 a month rental income.
His rental expenses for the year are as follows:
Fire insurance (1-year policy) |
$200 |
Mortgage interest |
5,000 |
Fee paid to real estate company for collecting monthly rent |
572 |
General repairs |
175 |
Real estate taxes imposed and paid |
800 |
Justin's basis for depreciation of the townhouse is $65,000. He is using MACRS with a
27.5-year recovery period. On April 1, Justin bought a new refrigerator for the rental
property at a cost of $725. He uses the MACRS method with a 5-year recovery period. The
dishwasher qualifies for the special depreciation allowance which he figures first.
Justin uses the percentage for January in Table 10-3-D to figure his
depreciation deduction for the townhouse. He uses the percentage under Half-year
convention in Table 10-3-A to figure his depreciation deduction for the
refrigerator. He must report the depreciation on Form 4562.
Justin figures his net rental income or loss for the townhouse as follows:
Total rental income received |
|
|
($1,100 × 12) |
$13,200 |
Minus Expenses: |
|
|
Fire insurance (1-year policy) |
200 |
|
Mortgage interest |
5,000 |
|
Rent collection fee |
572 |
|
General repairs |
175 |
|
Real estate taxes |
800 |
|
Total expenses |
6,747 |
Balance |
$6,453 |
Minus Depreciation: |
|
|
Townhouse ($65,000 × 3.485%) |
2,265 |
|
Refrigerator-special allowance ($725 × 30%) |
218 |
|
Refrigerator ($725 - $218 special allowance × 20%) |
101 |
|
Total depreciation |
2,584 |
Net rental income for townhouse |
$3,869 |
- Continue - |