This is a property that she just had a management company manage although they just rented it out for 2 days. We are calling it a personal property. Should I just ignore the 1099? The income is nontaxable, but to put the 1099 I have to link a Schedule E, which I don't want to do since it isn't a rental. Thanks.
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No, you cant ignore it..why would it be non taxable?
Rents From Personal Property
If you rent out personal property, such as equipment or vehicles, how you report your income and expenses is generally determined by:
Reporting nonbusiness income. If you aren't in the business of renting personal property, report your rental income on Form 1040, line 21. List the type and amount of the income on the dotted line next to line 21.
Reporting nonbusiness expenses. If you rent personal property for profit, include your rental expenses in the total amount you enter on Form 1040, line 36. Also, enter the amount and "PPR" on the dotted line next to line 36.
If you don't rent personal property for profit, your deductions are limited and you can't report a loss to offset other income.
What you mean is that it is real property, held for personal use. I think all the IRS employees who work the CP-2000 program have gone home, and if they come back there will be criteria that suppress notices with less than (just guessing) $2,500 of rental income. But others will suggest some sort of add-it-in-then-back-it-out concoction.
It was her vacation home she rented out.
Yes rental property. Since it was just a few days it wasn't taxable.
Where does it state this? "Since it was just a few days it wasn't taxable"
It’s the “Masters rule”. If you rent out for 14 days or less, the rent isn’t taxable.
But hasn't that been suspended this year?
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