Renting to relatives
Monday, June 28th, 2010
Renting property to your relatives can be a good thing. You know them, and you probably have a good idea of how they will take care of the property. You may consider renting to your retired parents or to your children attending college. You must play by IRS rules to retain the tax advantages of renting out property. If you don’t, the deductions will be disallowed while the income is taxed – a double tax hit. You may also suffer unfavorable tax consequences when you sell the property.
Special rules apply to rental of a residence (rental house or apartment) and to vacation home rental.
You must charge a fair rent to your relative on a residence to avoid having that property reclassified as a second home (and losing rental deductions).
- Prove fair rent by collecting third-party documentation about rents for similar properties in the area from the want ads and craigslist. Letters from property managers and independent appraisals are good evidence to support fair rent.
- Do not make gifts to help your tenant pay the rent. The gift will be deemed to reduce the rent, putting it below fair value and jeopardizing the rental claim.
- One alternative for your relative who needs rent money is gifting business assets and having your company lease them back so that your tenant receives rental income. Another option is to hire your relative, although that generates payroll taxes.
- You may consider a good-tenant discount of no more than 10%. One justification for this discount is that there is no need for a rental management company, passing the savings to the tenant.
- If you wish to set up a rent-to-own situation, you must follow the rules for a shared-equity financing agreement for the rental to stand.
- Your relative must use the rental property as a principal residence.
If you have a vacation home that you rent for part of the year and also use personally, the tax code provides a break on rental income. Your personal use of the vacation home must not exceed the greater of 14 days or 10% of rental days per year. If your relatives use the vacation home, their use counts toward these limits even if you charge fair rent. If your combined use exceeds these limits, the property becomes a second home, which makes the rent income taxable while eliminating the usual rent expense deductions.
If you are considering renting to relatives, a call to us will help ensure that everything is done in a way that secures the greatest tax advantages and best financial outcome for your family.