Hurricane Milton has caused catastrophic damage to many parts of Florida. Less than two weeks earlier, Hurricane Helene victimized millions of people in multiple states across the southeastern portion of the country. The two devastating storms are among the many weather-related disasters this year. Indeed, natural disasters have led to significant losses for many taxpayers, from hurricanes, tornadoes and other severe storms to the wildfires again raging in the West.
If your family or business has been affected by a natural disaster, you may qualify for a casualty loss deduction and federal tax relief.
Understanding the casualty loss deduction
A casualty loss can result from the damage, destruction or loss of property due to any sudden, unexpected or unusual event. Examples include floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, fires, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Normal wear and tear or progressive deterioration of property doesn’t constitute a deductible casualty loss. For example, drought generally doesn’t qualify.
The availability of the tax deduction for casualty losses varies depending on whether the losses relate to personal- or business-use items. Generally, you can deduct casualty losses related to your home, household items and personal vehicles if they’re caused by a federally declared disaster. Under current law, that’s defined as a disaster in an area that the U.S. president declares eligible for federal assistance. Casualty losses related to business or income-producing property (for example, rental property) can be deducted regardless of whether they occur in a federally declared disaster area.
Casualty losses are deductible in the year of the loss, usually the year of the casualty event. If your loss stems from a federally declared disaster, you can opt to treat it as having occurred in the previous year. You may receive your refund more quickly if you amend the previous year’s return than if you wait until you file your return for the casualty year.
Factoring in reimbursements
If your casualty loss is covered by insurance, you must reduce the loss by the amount of any reimbursement or expected reimbursement. (You also must reduce the loss by any salvage value.)
Reimbursement also could lead to capital gains tax liability. When the amount you receive from insurance or other reimbursements (less any expense you incurred to obtain reimbursement, such as the cost of an appraisal) exceeds the cost or adjusted basis of the property, you have a capital gain. You’ll need to include that gain as income unless you’re eligible to postpone reporting the gain.
You may be able to postpone the reporting obligation if you purchase property that’s similar in service or use to the destroyed property within the specified replacement period. You can also postpone if you buy a controlling interest (at least 80%) in a corporation owning similar property or if you spend the reimbursement to restore the property.
Alternatively, you can offset casualty gains with casualty losses not attributable to a federally declared disaster. This is the only way you can deduct personal-use property casualty losses incurred in locations not declared disaster areas.
Calculating casualty loss
For personal-use property, or business-use or income-producing property that isn’t completely destroyed, your casualty loss is the lesser of:
The adjusted basis of the property immediately before the loss (generally, your original cost, plus improvements and less depreciation), or
The drop in fair market value (FMV) of the property as a result of the casualty (that is, the difference between the FMV immediately before and immediately after the casualty).
For business-use or income-producing property that’s completely destroyed, the amount of the loss is the adjusted basis less any salvage value and reimbursements.
If a single casualty involves more than one piece of property, you must figure each loss separately. You then combine these losses to determine the casualty loss.
An exception applies to personal-use real property, such as a home. The entire property (including improvements such as landscaping) is treated as one item. The loss is the smaller of the decline in FMV of the whole property and the entire property’s adjusted basis.
Other limits may apply to the amount of the loss you can deduct, too. For personal-use property, you must reduce each casualty loss by $100 (after you’ve subtracted any salvage value and reimbursement).
If you suffer more than one casualty loss during the tax year, you must reduce each loss by $100 and report each on a separate IRS form. If two or more taxpayers have losses from the same casualty, the $100 rule applies separately to each taxpayer.
But that’s not all. For personal-use property, you also must reduce your total casualty losses by 10% of your adjusted gross income after you’ve applied the $100 rule. As a result, smaller personal-use casualty losses often provide little or no tax benefit.
Keeping necessary records
Documentation is critical to claim a casualty loss deduction. You’ll need to show:
That you were the owner of the property or, if you leased it, that you were contractually liable to the owner for the damage,
The type of casualty and when it occurred,
That the loss was a direct result of the casualty, and
Whether a claim for reimbursement with a reasonable expectation of recovery exists.
You also must be able to establish your adjusted basis, reimbursements and, for personal-use property, pre- and post-casualty FMVs.
Qualifying for IRS relief
This year, the IRS has granted tax relief to taxpayers affected by numerous natural disasters. For example, Hurricane Helene relief was recently granted to the entire states of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina and parts of Florida, Tennessee and Virginia. The relief typically extends filing and other deadlines. The IRS may provide additional relief to Hurricane Milton victims. (For detailed information about your area, visit: target="_blank">https://bit.ly/3nzF2ui.)
Be aware that you can be an affected taxpayer even if you don’t live in a federally declared disaster area. You’re considered affected if records you need to meet a filing or payment deadline postponed during the applicable relief period are located in a covered disaster area. For example, if you don’t live in a disaster area but your tax preparer does and is unable to pay or file on your behalf, you likely qualify for filing and payment relief.
Turning to us for help
If you’ve had the misfortune of incurring casualty losses due to a natural disaster, contact us. We’d be pleased to help you take advantage of all available tax benefits and relief.
© 2024
If your family or business has been affected by a natural disaster, you may qualify for a casualty loss deduction and federal tax relief.
Understanding the casualty loss deduction
A casualty loss can result from the damage, destruction or loss of property due to any sudden, unexpected or unusual event. Examples include floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, fires, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Normal wear and tear or progressive deterioration of property doesn’t constitute a deductible casualty loss. For example, drought generally doesn’t qualify.
The availability of the tax deduction for casualty losses varies depending on whether the losses relate to personal- or business-use items. Generally, you can deduct casualty losses related to your home, household items and personal vehicles if they’re caused by a federally declared disaster. Under current law, that’s defined as a disaster in an area that the U.S. president declares eligible for federal assistance. Casualty losses related to business or income-producing property (for example, rental property) can be deducted regardless of whether they occur in a federally declared disaster area.
Casualty losses are deductible in the year of the loss, usually the year of the casualty event. If your loss stems from a federally declared disaster, you can opt to treat it as having occurred in the previous year. You may receive your refund more quickly if you amend the previous year’s return than if you wait until you file your return for the casualty year.
Factoring in reimbursements
If your casualty loss is covered by insurance, you must reduce the loss by the amount of any reimbursement or expected reimbursement. (You also must reduce the loss by any salvage value.)
Reimbursement also could lead to capital gains tax liability. When the amount you receive from insurance or other reimbursements (less any expense you incurred to obtain reimbursement, such as the cost of an appraisal) exceeds the cost or adjusted basis of the property, you have a capital gain. You’ll need to include that gain as income unless you’re eligible to postpone reporting the gain.
You may be able to postpone the reporting obligation if you purchase property that’s similar in service or use to the destroyed property within the specified replacement period. You can also postpone if you buy a controlling interest (at least 80%) in a corporation owning similar property or if you spend the reimbursement to restore the property.
Alternatively, you can offset casualty gains with casualty losses not attributable to a federally declared disaster. This is the only way you can deduct personal-use property casualty losses incurred in locations not declared disaster areas.
Calculating casualty loss
For personal-use property, or business-use or income-producing property that isn’t completely destroyed, your casualty loss is the lesser of:
The adjusted basis of the property immediately before the loss (generally, your original cost, plus improvements and less depreciation), or
The drop in fair market value (FMV) of the property as a result of the casualty (that is, the difference between the FMV immediately before and immediately after the casualty).
For business-use or income-producing property that’s completely destroyed, the amount of the loss is the adjusted basis less any salvage value and reimbursements.
If a single casualty involves more than one piece of property, you must figure each loss separately. You then combine these losses to determine the casualty loss.
An exception applies to personal-use real property, such as a home. The entire property (including improvements such as landscaping) is treated as one item. The loss is the smaller of the decline in FMV of the whole property and the entire property’s adjusted basis.
Other limits may apply to the amount of the loss you can deduct, too. For personal-use property, you must reduce each casualty loss by $100 (after you’ve subtracted any salvage value and reimbursement).
If you suffer more than one casualty loss during the tax year, you must reduce each loss by $100 and report each on a separate IRS form. If two or more taxpayers have losses from the same casualty, the $100 rule applies separately to each taxpayer.
But that’s not all. For personal-use property, you also must reduce your total casualty losses by 10% of your adjusted gross income after you’ve applied the $100 rule. As a result, smaller personal-use casualty losses often provide little or no tax benefit.
Keeping necessary records
Documentation is critical to claim a casualty loss deduction. You’ll need to show:
That you were the owner of the property or, if you leased it, that you were contractually liable to the owner for the damage,
The type of casualty and when it occurred,
That the loss was a direct result of the casualty, and
Whether a claim for reimbursement with a reasonable expectation of recovery exists.
You also must be able to establish your adjusted basis, reimbursements and, for personal-use property, pre- and post-casualty FMVs.
Qualifying for IRS relief
This year, the IRS has granted tax relief to taxpayers affected by numerous natural disasters. For example, Hurricane Helene relief was recently granted to the entire states of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina and parts of Florida, Tennessee and Virginia. The relief typically extends filing and other deadlines. The IRS may provide additional relief to Hurricane Milton victims. (For detailed information about your area, visit: target="_blank">https://bit.ly/3nzF2ui.)
Be aware that you can be an affected taxpayer even if you don’t live in a federally declared disaster area. You’re considered affected if records you need to meet a filing or payment deadline postponed during the applicable relief period are located in a covered disaster area. For example, if you don’t live in a disaster area but your tax preparer does and is unable to pay or file on your behalf, you likely qualify for filing and payment relief.
Turning to us for help
If you’ve had the misfortune of incurring casualty losses due to a natural disaster, contact us. We’d be pleased to help you take advantage of all available tax benefits and relief.
© 2024