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July 28, 2024
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Rental property fire damage insurance paid out but property not sold

  • July 28, 2024
  • 2 replies
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I have a rental property that had a fire in March 2023. The entire property is uninhabitable. The insurance company paid out a flat amount of money (to include rental income).

There is no plan to rebuild the property and it has not been sold yet in the 2023 year.

Where do I report the money paid from the insurance company? I know I put the amount of rental income under income, but what about the rest.

I read a post to put it all under income, however when I try to work under depreciation and assets- it shows up under "less common business situations" as sale of business property. 

As if it is in there 2 times...

Help...

 

 

Best answer by M-MTax

To the extent the insurance payment was to compensate for lost rental income, it's included on your return as such on Sch E.

To the extent the insurance payment was to compensate for property damage, it is not taxable unless the payment exceeds your basis in the property.

2 replies

M-MTax
M-MTaxAnswer
July 28, 2024

To the extent the insurance payment was to compensate for lost rental income, it's included on your return as such on Sch E.

To the extent the insurance payment was to compensate for property damage, it is not taxable unless the payment exceeds your basis in the property.

pagirl65Author
July 28, 2024

Thank you.

How do I put this into Turbo Tax home and business? Part of the payment was for income loss and the rest was for the property damage.

 

 

M-MTax
July 29, 2024

You don't need to put the part that was for damage into Turbotax until you sell the property unless you want to immediately reduce your basis to zero and consider the insurance payment a "sale".

The part that was for lost rental income should go in the section for rental properties.

May 2, 2025

<p>Thanks for sharing your experience. It's really helpful to hear how others navigate similar tax issues. Your insights add great value to the community. It's reassuring to know that there's support and advice here when things get confusing. Wishing you smooth waters ahead.</p>