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June 3, 2025
Question

Do I need to claim an insurance payment for damages?

  • June 3, 2025
  • 2 replies
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    2 replies

    DoninGA
    June 3, 2025

    You do not claim damages or an insurance claim for your personal residence on a tax return, unless you are in a federally declared disaster area.

    June 3, 2025

    If receive a payment from an insurance company for damages, it is only taxable if it is for more than your cost basis.

     

    Your cost basis is what you originally paid, plus the cost of permanent improvements, minus any depreciation you claimed for business use.

     

    • For example, you bought a car for $20,000, it was totaled, and you received $15,000 present value as damages.  Not taxable.
    • You bought a car for $20,000, it was totaled, and you received $25,000 in replacement cost coverage.  $5000 is taxable.
    • You bought a car for $20,000, and used it in business and claimed $10,000 of depreciation.  It was totaled and you received $15,000 present value as damages.  Because your adjusted cost basis is reduced by depreciation, your basis is now $10,000, so $5000 is business income. 
    M-MTax
    June 4, 2025

    @Opus 17 wrote:
    • You bought a car for $20,000, it was totaled, and you received $25,000 in replacement cost coverage.  $5000 is taxable.
    • You bought a car for $20,000, and used it in business and claimed $10,000 of depreciation.  It was totaled and you received $15,000 present value as damages.  Because your adjusted cost basis is reduced by depreciation, your basis is now $10,000, so $5000 is business income. 

    Only thing is that if ALL of the insurance proceeds are used to buy replacement property, like a replacement for the car, then any gain could be deferred under Section 1033.

     

    The replacement property must be of similar or like-kind, however.

    June 4, 2025

    @M-MTax wrote:

    @Opus 17 wrote:
    • You bought a car for $20,000, it was totaled, and you received $25,000 in replacement cost coverage.  $5000 is taxable.
    • You bought a car for $20,000, and used it in business and claimed $10,000 of depreciation.  It was totaled and you received $15,000 present value as damages.  Because your adjusted cost basis is reduced by depreciation, your basis is now $10,000, so $5000 is business income. 

    Only thing is that if ALL of the insurance proceeds are used to buy replacement property, like a replacement for the car, then any gain could be deferred under Section 1033.

     

    The replacement property must be of similar or like-kind, however.


    I believe that is only for business property.  And, for completeness sake, the rule is similar if your house is damaged and you repair it, but the insurance payment to make the repair is more than the original price.   The general rule is as above.  For edge cases, please give specifics.