I have a client that participated in a like-kind exchange. They used an intermediary party. The purchased property ($240K) was less than the FMV of the relinquished property ($550K). The basis on the relinquished property ($165K) would reduce the taxable gain. They only received the funds for the difference between the gain ($550K-$165K) - $240K. The cash received was $145K. Please coach me on how to enter this in ProSeries. The 8824 wants to treat the $165K basis plus cash received $145K as boot. Please coach me on how to enter the partial 1031 exchange. Thank you!
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@Mel7777 wrote:They only received the funds for the difference between the gain ($550K-$165K) - $240K. The cash received was $145K.
No, the client received $310k ($550 sold, $240 bought). Some of that may have been forwarded to the mortgage company to pay off the mortgage, but the client received $310.
The program is correct and that is all taxable. There was no point in the client doing the 1031 exchange, and wasting money paying the third-party intermediary.
1031 Exchanges are generally for 'upgrading' to a higher cost property. Going down results in some or all of it being taxable.
Sorry for the bad news.
@TaxGuyBill wrote:No, the client received $310k ($550 sold, $240 bought). Some of that may have been forwarded to the mortgage company to pay off the mortgage, but the client received $310.
The program is correct and that is all taxable. There was no point in the client doing the 1031 exchange, and wasting money paying the third-party intermediary.
In this case they're still deferring $75K of gain ($240 - $165) so there might have been some point in doing a 1031 (but I'd guess that the tax savings were eaten up by the fees!)
Rick
I'll have to look through the form again, but I have stuck in my head that the extra cash cancels that out.
@TaxGuyBill wrote:I'll have to look through the form again, but I have stuck in my head that the extra cash cancels that out.
In this case the gain is $550 - $165 = $385. Boot received was only $310 so that's how much gain gets recognized. The right answer is probably something completely different but I'm ignoring facts not in evidence such as closing costs and prior depreciation.
That makes sense. But the OP is still stuck with figuring out how to enter it in ProSeries.
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