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IRS
Issues Vacation Home Ruling
The
IRS has just issued a new ruling
that sets forth the guidelines for those taxpayers
that wish to do a 1031 exchange involving a vacation
home. While I believe that the IRS intends that
the ruling will put to bed all of the controversy
surrounding this issue, it will certainly create
more controversy than it settles.
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by Gary Gorman
founding partner, 1031 Exchange Experts, LLC |
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By way of background, you can only
exchange property held for investment or used in a
trade or business. Personal use property, such as a
residence, does not qualify for an exchange; so the
question is: are vacation homes investment
property or personal use property? Up until
last year there was no guidance from the IRS that said
that vacation homes do not qualify for an exchange,
but that changed when the U.S. Tax Court disallowed
a taxpayer’s exchange from one vacation home
into another.
One of the problems with the court
case is that the taxpayer made no attempt to argue
that their vacation homes were investment property;
they didn’t counter the IRS arguments that they
were personal use homes (which in truth it sounds like
they were). The court case immediately gave rise to
the question of what has to be done to qualify
a vacation home for a 1031 exchange? - this
ruling is the IRS attempt to answer that question.
The ruling was released as a Revenue
Procedure, which is a type of “cook book” ruling – it
sets out what a taxpayer must do to achieve a certain
result from the IRS. In this case the result is a promise
from them that they will not dispute the investment
nature of your vacation home – in other words,
if you do certain things, your property is guaranteed
to be treated as investment property.
So what do you have to do to achieve
this result? First, the ruling imposes a 24
month holding period, for the Old Property
if that is your vacation home, or the New Property
if you intend to buy a vacation home, or for both if
you’re moving from one vacation home to another.
For each 12 month block of this holding
period you must have rented the vacation home for at
least 14 days at a fair market rent.
The definition of fair market rent is determined at
the time the rental is entered into. I’m not
sure how they plan to police this because fair rent
differs between properties within the same complex;
it differs based on the time of year; and it differs
based on who the tenants are. For example, I would
rent my vacation home to a retired couple for less
than I would rent it to a couple of college kids that
want to stay there during Spring Break.
Also during each 12 month block, the
owner is only allowed to use the property for the greater
of 14 days or 10% of the days rented. This means that
if you rented the property for 30 days that year, you
could still use it for 14 days, but if you rented it
for 200 you could use it for 20. Days that relatives
use the unit, presumably for free, count against you
(although I have to believe that will not be the case
if they pay a fair rent).
Days that your partner uses the property
also count against you. For example if you and Fred
each own 50% of the property as tenants-in-common,
days that Fred or his family use the property count
against your 14 day allotment and effect your ability
to do an exchange, just as your personal usage effects
his. This will turn out to be a huge problem for those
of you in co-ownership situations with vastly different
objectives for the property.
Although not specifically discussed
in the ruling, you are allowed a reasonable number
of “maintenance days” to care for the unit.
These days need to be reasonable - even the IRS knows
that it doesn’t take a week to shampoo the carpets.
This ruling is effective for sales
of property taking place after March 10, 2008. This
could be a problem if you are under contract to sell
a vacation home that will close after that date. But
before you slit your wrist, just remember: this is
a safe harbor ruling – it doesn’t mean
that your exchange is toast if you fail, although you
can expect closer scrutiny if you do get audited. Common
sense would also dictate that the IRS will get more
stringent with these guidelines as time goes on and
people have had a chance to comply.
So what happens if you don’t
meet the test? Again, remember: this ruling is a safe
harbor ruling – if you fail, the IRS won’t
automatically disallow your exchange, and they won’t
automatically audit you. In other words, the fact that
you used the property for 15 days two years ago will
not automatically toast your exchange today.
Some of you have never rented, or
tried to rent, your unit, and some of you have used
it two or three or four months a year the last few
years; this ruling is probably the death knell for
your exchange. Most of our clients, however, actually
come amazingly close to meeting it. My advice to all
of you is to tighten up your record keeping and your
tax reporting of your property. Be serious in your
rental attempts; charge family members the going rental
rate when they use it. Keep detailed records of the
dates you use it and what you did – especially
for each maintenance day. Your success at doing an
exchange could very well come down to how good your
records are.
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