

PadSplit & Co-Living vs. Short-Term Rentals Do the Tax Breaks Match
ode of Tax Tuesday, Anderson attorneys Amanda Wynalda, Esq., and Eliot Thomas, Esq., tackle a diverse range of tax questions from viewers. They explore the differences between PadSplit/co-living models and short-term rentals, explaining why PadSplit typically doesn't qualify for the same tax advantages as short-term rental activities. The duo covers entity formation costs and how they're treated for disregarded LLCs, the importance of proper documentation for independent contractor payments including W-9 forms and 1099 requirements, and cryptocurrency taxation for long-term holders. They also discuss offsetting bond interest with stock losses, wash sale rules for options trading, 1031 exchange strategies including improvement exchanges to minimize boot taxation, and comprehensive guidance on real estate professional status requirements. The episode concludes with settling a marital dispute about whether primary residence maintenance counts toward real estate professional status hours.
Submit your tax question to taxtuesday@andersonadvisors.com
Highlights/Topics:
- "Are the fees for disregarded LLCs taxable on the business return or the personal return?" - Fees follow the entity's disregarded destination and activity type.
- "Will the PadSplit/co-living model give you the same tax advantage as a short-term rental?" - No, PadSplit typically doesn't qualify for short-term rental benefits.
- "Last year I purchased a three-level eight-bedroom house with one kitchen and one bathroom on each floor. I rent the floors as separate apartments except for one level where I have two rooms rented separately. I put the house in service on January 25. I listed it as my primary residence. I never actually lived there. Can I perform a cost segregation, take advantage of bonus depreciation, et cetera?" - Yes for cost seg, but homestead fraud concerns exist.
- "I paid freelancers to put up a fence last year. I didn't get a receipt. Can I write off any of the costs of this fence? I used my company credit card or bank checks to conduct business with vendors and stores. I am bad at keeping receipts. But I print my bank statements. Can I use my statements as proof of purchase for tax purposes?" - Bank statements help but proper W-9s and 1099s are required.
- "I will be receiving profits from the sale of cryptocurrency investments that I've had for five years. I'm retired and receive social security as my only income. How will this crypto be gained from an IRS perspective?" - Taxed as capital gains, likely at fifteen percent rate.
- "Can interest gained on a US savings bond be offset with the loss on a stock sale for tax purposes?" - Yes, up to three thousand annually against ordinary income.
- "If I sell a stock at a loss and purchase calls instead, do I lose my loss benefit as if I had repurchased more stock within the 30 day period? Or in simpler terms, are calls treated the same as stock?" - Yes, calls typically trigger wash sale rule provisions.
- "We did a 1031 exchange with the building we own, but the place that we bought the replacement property was 250,000 cheaper. How do we minimize our capital gains on the leftover money? I know we can use capital improvements that we've made, but what are the rules and how must we document the improvements? Likewise, can we use depreciation schedules from the prior returns for the new tax returns?" - improvement exchanges must occur during exchange.
- "I wanna know more about the tests for real estate professional status as a way to deduct expenses from other passive income. I understand that I need 750 hours, but this is very loose and I'm not sure how it is audited exactly." - 750 hours plus fifty percent test, requires detailed documentation.
- "Please settle this one thing that my husband and I disagree on, I say that maintenance on our primary residence cannot be used towards rep status. He says certain things you could count towards reps would be pool maintenance, HVAC service, et cetera. I say no because it's a primary residence and reps is strictly for time you spend on rentals only. I'd like him to not have to sleep on the couch any longer." - No, personal residence maintenance doesn't count toward business hours.
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