I have a client who's spouse died in 2017. He now tells me he did not take a step up in basis on his depreciation. Do I have to amend his returns to take the step up in basis for his rental (which was community property)? It is my understanding that I can update the depreciation on his next tax return and not worry about amending. He is planning on
This discussion has been locked. No new contributions can be made. You may start a new discussion here
You "have to" tell your client that amending will save him taxes and give him an estimate of how much tax it would save him, as well as an estimate of how much your fees will be to amend.
After that, it is the client's choice whether or not to amend. With a full step-up, it is likely that amending will save the client more tax than what you would charge for your fees, so the client will want to amend.
@EL wrote:It is my understanding that I can update the depreciation on his next tax return and not worry about amending.
You can update that year's depreciation to be correct, but you can't fix the prior years unless you amend.
AND, your client will be dinged for that missed depreciation whether he amends or not.
Research "allowed or allowable" for the details.
@TaxGuyBill With a full step-up, it is likely that amending will save the client more tax than what you would charge for your fees, so the client will want to amend.
Sheer conjecture. Let's say it's a $20,000 step-up. (I know, it could be $2,000 or $200,000, but we don't know.) So over a year and a half (I'm assuming she died in mid-2017) it's about $1,000 more depreciation. In a 22% tax bracket, that's a $220 difference. Maybe a small amount of state tax, also. You do amended returns for less than $100 a year? I'll send you some clients.
On the other hand, maybe the AGI is over $150K and we're just adjusting the carryover losses. Does that require amended returns, I wonder?
The real advantage here is to reset the accumulated depreciation.
Of course it is pure conjuncture. But:
Of course it is pure conjuncture conjecture . But:
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the Intuit Accountants Community. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the community and be taken to that site instead.